tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post7875605508367014357..comments2008-08-04T16:07:45.247+09:00Comments on My So-Called Japanese Life: Mustard-Dill BurgersUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-14955451247708103262007-04-04T10:06:00.000+09:002007-04-04T10:06:00.000+09:00I've tried this but food pictures are trickier tha...I've tried this but food pictures are trickier than most because you want to get in tighter for detail. If you draw back enough to mitigate the flash issue, you don't get a close enough shot of the food.<BR/><BR/>The only thing that usually does work is covering the flash with a folded tissue (that's how I got the shot of my wedding ring without blowing out all the detail). However, with food getting cold (that was my dinner, after all) and the picture not being so important, I wasn't going to take the time to play around so much with the flash.Sharihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17419851636570519145noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-65714408884689463792007-04-03T23:30:00.000+09:002007-04-03T23:30:00.000+09:00Even with a consumer-level camera, there should be...Even with a consumer-level camera, there should be a function-menu option for dimming the flash. But if there's not, just step back some and zoom in. The old inverse-square law will decrease the flash intensity for ya.Luishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08027590154507641968noreply@blogger.com