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My daughter has a red eye in photo every time one is taken

2007-01-15 12:51:24 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Cameras

it never matters, when a flash is used she will have the red eye, i never do & my husband never does, nor many people I know maybe her eyes are always dilated? can your eyes become dilated when your excited, she's always excited to have a phot taken???

2007-01-15 18:16:43 · update #1

6 answers

Depending on their eye color, especially light colored eyes, and also if any light is shinning on them, it could be even the tiniest bit, and it will make a difference. Always try to use the red eye setting, as it will do a preflash before the actual picture is taken, to get the person's eyes used to the flash.

2007-01-15 12:58:16 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Red eye is all about the angle between the flash, the person's eye, and the camera lens. If that angle is just a little different then a person will not get the dreaded red eye.

As others have mentioned, if a person's eyes are dilated they are more likely to have a red eye problem because that opening to the back of the eye is just bigger. Some people have eyes that are more susceptable to light and their pupils might constrict more while your duaghter's constricts less.

Red eye reduction on cameras sort of works. A flash disfuser can also help and they make those even for point-and-shoot cameras.

2007-01-15 22:04:29 · answer #2 · answered by k3s793 4 · 1 0

The light from the flash is reflected off the back of the inside of the eye. If it is dark in the room, the eyes will be dilated and reflect more light and look red in the picture. If you use red eye flash, the flash will fire in short bursts prior to the actual flash and close the opening in the eyes, thus reducing the effect.

2007-01-15 21:09:28 · answer #3 · answered by Michael Lovallo 1 · 1 0

Its the reflection of the flash from the camera reflecting the retina of the eye. So use Red-Eye Flash to prevent red eye in low light situations

Just depends on the angles for red eye to occur.

2007-01-15 21:56:05 · answer #4 · answered by Koko 4 · 0 0

Most cameras have a flash feed back from a person eyes, its gleam becuase they look right into the flash at those moments. to prevent this, set the camera flash to slow flash.

2007-01-15 21:17:56 · answer #5 · answered by Charles M 1 · 0 0

some time it the eye color or how they are standing or there head is when the picture is taken.

2007-01-15 20:54:50 · answer #6 · answered by shades_is_here_now_too 2 · 0 0

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