Rogue Flashbender

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I've used one for those moments when a subject is harshly backlit, yet insists on having a shot taken anyway.

The example I have in mind is outdoors in broad daylight, with the subject standing in full shade. Either the background will be tremendously blown out by exposing for the face, or the face will be unacceptably dark if exposing for the background. Such a condition is manageable, but when the subject demands the shot anyway, the flashbender can help with fill flash. Instead a "direct fill flash look" to the image, the flashbender serves as a nice bounce surface, softening--so to speak--the light on the subject. Though the direction of the light is undeniably from straight on, the result is less undesirable than using flash aimed directly at the subject.

The large flashbender can be used as a snoot, and that capacity may add to the usefulness of the Rogue product for you. I have not used the diffuser.
 
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notapro said:
I've used one for those moments when a subject is harshly backlit, yet insists on having a shot taken anyway.

The example I have in mind is outdoors in broad daylight, with the subject standing in full shade. Either the background will be tremendously blown out by exposing for the face, or the face will be unacceptably dark if exposing for the background. Such a condition is manageable, but when the subject demands the shot anyway, the flashbender can help with fill flash. Instead a "direct fill flash look" to the image, the flashbender serves as a nice bounce surface, softening--so to speak--the light on the subject. Though the direction of the light is undeniably from straight on, the result is less undesirable than using flash aimed directly at the subject.

The large flashbender can be used as a snoot, and that capacity may add to the usefulness of the Rogue product for you. I have not used the diffuser.

What's a snoot?

I bought one of these, but I'm waiting a week or so for delivery (long-ish story) and what I thought I would do is use it for off camera flash... so hopefully the results come out well. I'm going to get the medium one... Seems a better fit for what I need it for.
 
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A snoot is basically a device that is like a tube. It focuses your flash to a very narrow beam to highlight only a portion of the subject for dramatic effect.



jdramirez said:
notapro said:
I've used one for those moments when a subject is harshly backlit, yet insists on having a shot taken anyway.

The example I have in mind is outdoors in broad daylight, with the subject standing in full shade. Either the background will be tremendously blown out by exposing for the face, or the face will be unacceptably dark if exposing for the background. Such a condition is manageable, but when the subject demands the shot anyway, the flashbender can help with fill flash. Instead a "direct fill flash look" to the image, the flashbender serves as a nice bounce surface, softening--so to speak--the light on the subject. Though the direction of the light is undeniably from straight on, the result is less undesirable than using flash aimed directly at the subject.

The large flashbender can be used as a snoot, and that capacity may add to the usefulness of the Rogue product for you. I have not used the diffuser.

What's a snoot?

I bought one of these, but I'm waiting a week or so for delivery (long-ish story) and what I thought I would do is use it for off camera flash... so hopefully the results come out well. I'm going to get the medium one... Seems a better fit for what I need it for.
 
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I use them all the time for indoor event stuff. I point the flash up at the ceiling (or at the wall) and let the flash bender fire forward. I would get the big one AND the small one if you can afford it. The small one is a bit less conspicuous.
 
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jdramirez said:
Would yall suggest spending the extra 5 bucks to get the large flashbender over the small?

I was thinking about getting the small so it would fit better in my bag.
I have both but the small one is the one I use most (it stays in my bag all the time). These things are really handy it is every bit as good as that big ugly "Tupperware looking thing" you see being used sometimes and doesn't look nearly as stupid.
 
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jp121 said:
It has been explained to me that 'generally' the bigger the reflected surface, the more natural the flash looks.

Something about making a small light source (flash) into a bigger light.
That is true. However neither of these things make the flash very "big" so they really don't help much. What these things do is act like a larger "bounce card" which is that little white thing that pops up in the 580 and 600 flashes. If you are using a 430 a flash bender is a handy thing to have (or a white business card and a rubber band).

The reason you have this thing is so that you can bounce the bulk of the flash output off of the ceiling or a wall while still sending some of it forward.
 
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