SargentRay wrote:
Also in this video Alexander Heinrichs who's style i really like, made these action shots (kind of the things i want to do to) But as you will see the ball is blurry and there is some ghosting around the faster moving parts of his model. Alexander says it is due to the slow flash duration of his Multiblitz flash heads used at almost full power. I'm guessing it's also due to a lack of sufficient lighting power with such an amount of ambient light, but a higher than x-speed sync would have helped too, am i right ?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4J3NJyiZYZkMy German is rusty (rusted shut, really), and the only thing I picked up was Aschaffenburg, which is where I spent a couple of weeks when I visited Germany. Pretty city.
However, it is correct to say the blur came from the flash, as it is the same color as the surrounding area, and the blur goes in the direction of the movement. Back light would have caused the ghosting to be darker. Sufficient lighting to eliminate the blur would mean to darken the ambient to black. And yes, a higher shutter speed would reduce or eliminate the ghosting (assuming the current physical limitations were not present).
As for the gradation, that is going to be due to different parts of the sensor seeing different parts of the flash curve. It may be evened out by using the flatter tail of the flash pulse, but then the power is greatly diminished. And there is not tail on Einstein except at or very near full power.
Depending on what you shoot and how you frame, this link may be useful.
http://strobist.blogspot.com/2008/10/gr ... -sync.html No special gear needed.