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Specification
- Designed to rapidly rotate into multiple shooting positions
- Rotates flash up to 180° and camera up to 90°
- Universal shoe mount compatible with most digital and 35mm SLR cameras
- Attaches to the bottom of your camera using a standard sized screw mount
- Can adjust the angle of the camera and the flash independently
- Made of heavy duty aluminum
- Professional black finish
- Excellent, lightweight aluminum alloy construction
- Comfortable, soft hand grip
Directions:- Use the bracket high off the camera in dark or low-light situations to avoid "red eye." Red eye is one of those annoying errors caused by low-light situations, where the eyes of your subjects turn bright or dull red. This is caused by the very bright flash unit going off directly in their eyes. Putting the flash high above the camera, instead of nearly directly in line with the lens---as popup fill flash units and other on-camera flashes do---and tilting it downward, gives the same bright flash, but doesn't shoot directly into the subject's eyes.
- Use the flash bracket to give more overall light to a crowd. If you shoot with your flash aimed directly at a crowd of people in low light, the people up front will be nearly washed out, while the ones right behind them will hardly be visible because of the angle of flash. By putting the flash unit on a bracket, then extending it upward and tilting it downward, will allow the light to spread out more to cover more people. The flash also acts a little like room lighting in that it is light coming down on their heads from above. This gives a bit more natural look to crowds.
- Turn the camera 90 degrees left or right. Not only does this give you a vertical shot, it also put the flash on the bracket to the side. This gives you a way to light people and objects from an unusual position for unusual effects.
- Use the flash bracket at camera level, but off to the side in combination with the popup fill flash on the camera. Together, these flash units will give you a wash of light that can illuminate an entire scene. The popup flash will give you direct light, while the bracketed flash unit will give you much more wide-spread light. This is good for large scenes, such as an overall view of a wedding, a garden or a crowd.
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