When shooting large group portraits, is there a trick to getting everyone to not blink (other than taking many shots)?
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A couple other tips:
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The trick I've heard is: have everyone close their eyes, and then open them on your command (and you then immediately take the photo). E.g., "Close your eyes.... now open them on 2. 1... 2... 3 [click]". Caveat is that I haven't actually tried this, but it makes a lot of sense to me. |
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Some people are very good at "TTL blinking" -- they blink when they see TTL metering preflash, and make that just in time to ruin the shot then the flash fires for real. You can prevent that by pre-metering flash exposure. On Canon DSLRs it's done via Flash Exposure Lock (FEL), which is another function of AE lock button. |
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Academic research has been done on this, and it even won an Ig Nobel Prize!
The original article appears offline, but it's available via the Internet Archive, and in PDF form on another site. |
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All flashes cause people to blink. Because many TTL systems today use a preflash, manual flash is a great way to avoid blinkers that sync up with the preflash-mainflash delay. And to add to other techniques people have posted to get it in one shot, shoot several shots in burst and blending is a very seamless and easy way to get an immaculate result. |
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