tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20182596.post1514345093910548669..comments2023-06-15T06:50:22.321-06:00Comments on Annual Report Photographer David Tejada "The f-Stops Here": Justin Clamp To The RescueUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20182596.post-73161337383898523902008-09-06T21:09:00.000-06:002008-09-06T21:09:00.000-06:00It was brought to my attention by blog reader Pier...It was brought to my attention by blog reader Pierre that the Exif data on the top photo shows that the flash did not fire.<BR/><BR/>How right he is. I rarely look at the Exif data of my photos. When shooting several shots in sequence it is not unlikely that strobes will misfire or do not recycle fast enough thus producing weak results.<BR/><BR/>Assuming the strobe fired on all shots with some weaker than others, I processed all the images where the composition worked best not paying attention weather the strobe actually fired or not.<BR/><BR/>When I return from Detroit, I will look at my files and indeed upload one where the strobe did fire.<BR/><BR/>Thanks for pointing this out to me Pierre. I want to be very actuate with the images I post on this blog and by no means intend to mislead or misrepresent technique.<BR/><BR/>You can also see that when editing images for clients, it's all about the composition and image quality. Weather a flash fires weakly or not at all matters not. What matters is the final image delivered to your client. DTDavid Tejadahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12409746127386558981noreply@blogger.com