Friday, July 24, 2009

Speed Photography - How to Photograph Exploding Fruit and Balloons Popping

What you need:

1. External Flash
2. Flash Trigger


Shutter Speed Myth

Most people believe that speed photography is done through very fast shutter speeds, like 1/1000 or faster. However, this is not true. Flash duration is the primary component for this. The duration of flash units range from 1/1000 of a second to almost 1/30,000 of a second. So as long as your subject is very dark, the only light your camera sensor will see is the light coming from the flash for that very short duration.


Flash Triggering

So now that you know that flash duration is more important than shutter speed, you need to have a way to fire the flash when the action happens. This is done by using a flash trigger. There are three main types: sound, light, and mechanical. Sound triggers will fire the flash when a loud sound is heard, and mechanical triggers fire when something comes in contract with the trigger. Light triggers create a beam of invisible light between two points, and fire the flash when the beam is broken (commonly used for water drop photos).

The sound trigger which was used in the example image was a home-built job with parts from Hiviz. Their kits are cheap ($7), but require a little electrical expertise. If you have an electronics background, they are super-easy to build. If you would like a fancy pre-built model, you can get one for about $170 here.


The Photo Shoot

1. Turn off or dim the lights
2. Open the shutter
3. Perform Action (I like shooting pellets at stuff)

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