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Mooron, red eye occurs on some shots with EVERY camera with a built in
flash. BULL****..... not when you know how to take a photo! Sorry, Mooron. No photographer using a camera mounted flash has ever succeeded in beating red-eye all of the time. Mooron, let me help you...read below: Photographic Basics-Red Eye While these techniques may reduce the chances for red-eye, it's more that likely that it will still occur on occasion. 1. Try to put distance between the camera's lens and flash to reduce red-eye. If possible, hold the flash an arm's length from the camera or point the flash toward a white surface, such as a wall, so the flash does not flood the subject's eyes. 2. If the flash is immobile, reduce the size of the subject's pupils by turning on bright lights or by shining a bright light briefly in the person's eyes prior to taking the picture. 3. Use the red-eye reduction feature available on many cameras. This feature constricts the pupils with a series of low-level flashes prior to taking the picture. 4. Put tissue paper or a white filter over the flash to diffuse its brightness. The tissue paper shouldn't come into direct contact with the hot flashbulb. Some camera shops sell flash diffusers. Mooron, perhaps you tell the photographic community how to avoid red-eye full time with a built in flash? We're all waiting! RB |
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