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4 answers

Not sure what you mean.

The camera and flash are usually in sync for obvious reasons.

2007-12-26 22:59:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This is from the Colorflash owners manual. I believe this will produce the effect you seek.


Long Exposure With Flash
Set the Control Switch (7) to the Moon Icon Activate the
Flash and aim the camera at your subject. Depress the
Shutter Release (8) for a time - anywhere from half a second
to more than a minute, and the shutter will stay open as long
as you hold down the button. When you release the shutter
button, the flash will fire a split second before it closes. This
produces a dual effect on one print - natural color, distorted
backgrounds with bright, flashed foregrounds. You can
control the background distortion through your exposure
time - holding down the button for more time usually yields
more distortion & vice versa.

2007-12-27 13:41:33 · answer #2 · answered by John T 6 · 0 0

see #6
http://shop.lomography.com/colorsplashcamera/tech.html

Edited to add - the sample photo on #6 appears to be using a flash that separates from the body of the camera. If yours does not, turn off the flash, leave the camera on a tripod with a long exposure time and use a separate flash (perhaps from an old 35mm or a DSLR) hand held with a color filter over it.

2007-12-27 07:18:18 · answer #3 · answered by Perki88 7 · 0 0

I'm having the same problem, I read #6 over and over but it doesn't make sense, because the flash goes off when you release the button, but there is no way to manually set it off that i know of

2007-12-27 08:13:58 · answer #4 · answered by y0r-T 1 · 0 0

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