HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

When setting photoflash exposures, the guide number (GN) of photoflash devices (flashbulbs and electronic devices known as "studio strobes", "on-camera flashes", "electronic flashes", "flashes", "speedlights", and "speedlites") is a measure photographers can use to calculate either the required
f-stop An f-number is a measure of the light-gathering ability of an optical system such as a camera lens. It is calculated by dividing the system's focal length by the diameter of the entrance pupil ("clear aperture").Smith, Warren ''Modern Optical ...
for any given flash-to-subject distance, or the required distance for any given f-stop. To solve for either of these two variables, one merely divides a device's guide number by the other. Though guide numbers are influenced by a variety of variables, their values are presented as the product of only two factors as follows: ::Guide number = f-number × distance This simple inverse relationship holds true because the brightness of a flash declines with the square of the distance, but the amount of light admitted through an aperture decreases with the square of the f-number.Scantips.com:
Understanding Flash Guide Numbers, plus GN Calculator
'
Accordingly, as illustrated at right, a guide number can be factored to a ''small f-number times a long distance'' just as readily as a ''large f-number times a short distance''. Guide numbers take into account the amount of
luminous energy In photometry, luminous energy is the perceived energy of light. This is sometimes called the quantity of light.film speed Film speed is the measure of a photographic film's sensitivity to light, determined by sensitometry and measured on various numerical scales, the most recent being the ISO system introduced in 1974. A closely related system, also known as IS ...
), flash coverage angle, and filters. Studio strobes in particular are often rated in watt⋅seconds, which is an absolute measure of illuminating power but is not particularly useful for calculating exposure settings. All else being equal, a guide number that twice as great will permit subjects to be properly exposed from twice as far away or an f-number twice as great. The guide number system, which manufacturers adopted after consistent-performing mass-produced flashbulbs became available in the late 1930s, has become nearly superfluous due to the ubiquity of electronic photoflash devices featuring variable flash output and automatic exposure control, as well as
digital camera A digital camera, also called a digicam, is a camera that captures photographs in Digital data storage, digital memory. Most cameras produced today are digital, largely replacing those that capture images on photographic film or film stock. Dig ...
s, which make it trivially easy, quick, and inexpensive to adjust exposures and try again. Still, guide numbers in combination with flash devices set to manual exposure mode remain valuable in a variety of circumstances, such as when unusual or exacting results are required and when shooting non-average scenery. Different models of flash devices available on the market have widely varying maximum-rated guide numbers. Since guide numbers are so familiar to photographers, they are near-universally used by manufacturers of on-camera flash devices to advertise their products' relative capability. However, such a practice demands industry-wide standardization of both the ISO setting and illumination angle underlying the ratings; this has only been partially realized. For the most part, manufacturers state guide numbers relative to a sensitivity of ISO 100.
mecablitz 52 AF-1 digital data page
- Metz mecatech GmbH

- Nikon * ttps://www.usa.canon.com/internet/portal/us/home/products/details/cameras/flashes/speedlite-430ex-iii-rt Speedlite 430EX III-RT product page- Canon
However, manufacturers sometimes rate guide numbers at ISO 200, which makes them 41% greater.SB-910 AF Speedlight product page
- Nikon):
The illumination angles underlying manufacturers' ratings vary greatly, which can make it particularly difficult to compare models.


Understanding guide numbers


Units of measure

Throughout most of the world where the metric system ( SI) is observed, guide numbers are expressed as a unitless numeric value like 34, even though they are technically a composite
unit of measure A unit of measurement, or unit of measure, is a definite magnitude of a quantity, defined and adopted by convention or by law, that is used as a standard for measurement of the same kind of quantity. Any other quantity of that kind can ...
that is a two-
factor Factor (Latin, ) may refer to: Commerce * Factor (agent), a person who acts for, notably a mercantile and colonial agent * Factor (Scotland), a person or firm managing a Scottish estate * Factors of production, such a factor is a resource used ...
product: As such, guide numbers can be reduced either to distance in meters or to f-stops depending on how one uses the guide number in a calculation. In the U.S. however, photographers typically measure distances in
feet The foot (: feet) is an anatomical structure found in many vertebrates. It is the terminal portion of a limb which bears weight and allows locomotion. In many animals with feet, the foot is an organ at the terminal part of the leg made up of ...
and require guide numbers scaled accordingly. To serve the U.S. market, manufacturers of flash devices typically provide foot-based guide numbers and add nomenclature such as feet, ft, or the foot symbol to unambiguously denote that fact, e.g. Guide number: . Another common practice when flash devices are marketed in the U.S. is to provide ''two'' guide numbers—which can be expressed in a variety of formats—so distances and f-numbers may be calculated using either feet or meters, e.g. Guide number: Though nomenclature conventions such as these can make guide numbers misleadingly appear to be ''length-based'' units of measure, they serve as ''notations'' to eliminate ambiguity as to which length-based system of measurement underlies the guide numbers. As with metric-based guide numbers, foot-based guide numbers are a two-factor unit of measure except the units are To convert a guide number given in meters to feet, divide by 0.3048. To convert a guide number given in feet to meters, ''multiply'' by 0.3048.


Calculating with guide numbers

It is easy to use guide numbers to calculate either an aperture or a flash-to-subject distance. Consider a flash device with a rating of 28 meters (which might be marked "92 feet", "28 DIN", "28/92", "92", etc.). Suppose a photographer has a flash device with a guide number of 44 (m) / 144 (ft), sets the camera's aperture to , and wants to know the required flash-to-subject distance; he merely divides the guide number by 4. Thus, a subject 11 meters or 36 feet away will be correctly illuminated = 11 m, and = 36 ft). For the same guide number and an aperture of , the light source must be 5.5 meters or 18 feet from the subject. Alternatively, if one has an established flash-to-subject distance and wants to find the required f-number, one divides the guide number by the distance. Example: Guide number = 48 (m) and the distance is 6 meters; one needs and aperture of (GN 48 ÷ 6 m = ).


Example for finding a distance

Suppose a photographer wants to shoot with an aperture of and the guide number is 28 (m) / 92 (ft). The flash device must be 10 meters (33 feet) from the subject. :In metric: GN 28 ÷ = 10 m :In U.S. customary units: GN 92 ÷ = 33 ft


Example for finding an aperture

Suppose a photographer's flash-to-subject distance is 9.75 meters (32 feet) and the guide number is 39 (m) / 128 (ft). The aperture must be . :In metric: GN 39 ÷ 9.75 m = :In U.S. customary units: GN 128 ÷ 32 ft =


Details

The magnitude of guide numbers is a function of the following four variables: # The total luminous energy (in lumen⋅seconds) emitted by the flash head (which is itself the product of the duration and the average
luminous flux In photometry, luminous flux or luminous power is the measure of the perceived power of light. It differs from radiant flux, the measure of the total power of electromagnetic radiation (including infrared, ultraviolet, and visible light), in that ...
of a flash). # The
solid angle In geometry, a solid angle (symbol: ) is a measure of the amount of the field of view from some particular point that a given object covers. That is, it is a measure of how large the object appears to an observer looking from that point. The poin ...
subtended by the circular- or rectangular-profile beam as it leaves the flash head (the average of the beam's X- and Y-axis angles). # The ISO sensitivity setting. # Filters (either on the flash or on the camera lens). See '' Effect of filters'', below. The above variables fall into two classes that influence the magnitude of guide numbers: # Those that affect the non-distance-related ''intensity'' of a flash arriving at a scene (a property called
illuminance In photometry (optics), photometry, illuminance is the total luminous flux incident on a surface, per unit area. It is a measure of how much the incident light illuminates the surface, wavelength-weighted by the luminosity function to correlate ...
, measured in
lux The lux (symbol: lx) is the unit of illuminance, or luminous flux per unit area, in the International System of Units (SI). It is equal to one lumen per square metre. In photometry, this is used as a measure of the irradiance, as perceived by ...
or lumens per square meter) or its ''duration''; namely its power setting, flash coverage angle, and
color gel A color gel or color filter ( Commonwealth spelling: colour gel or colour filter), also known as lighting gel or simply gel, is a transparent colored material that is used in theater, event production, photography, videography and cinematogr ...
s in front of the flash head. # Those that affect the camera's non-aperture-related ''light sensitivity''; namely lens filters and the ISO rating of the film/imaging sensor. Changing either the f-stop or the flash-to-subject distance does ''not'' affect guide numbers because, by definition, choosing a different value for one factor is automatically accompanied by a reciprocal adjustment in the other. Most modern flash devices can operate at guide numbers less than their maximum ratings via either manual adjustment of their power settings in binned steps, by an in-flash automatic light sensing feature, or by being cued by the camera's sensor; both the latter options make continuously variable adjustments. Manual attenuation settings are usually steps in powers of 0.5 (full f-stops) that commonly extend five to eight f-stops deep (power levels of , , ... ). Shutter speeds do not factor into guide number calculations with electronic flash and, for the most part, have no effect on exposures. Guide numbers are not affected by scene
reflectance The reflectance of the surface of a material is its effectiveness in reflecting radiant energy. It is the fraction of incident electromagnetic power that is reflected at the boundary. Reflectance is a component of the response of the electronic ...
. Guide numbers are a function of the
illuminance In photometry (optics), photometry, illuminance is the total luminous flux incident on a surface, per unit area. It is a measure of how much the incident light illuminates the surface, wavelength-weighted by the luminosity function to correlate ...
and duration of a flash (a property called ''luminous exposure'' that have lux⋅seconds as their units of measure) ''arriving'' at a scene as measured by an incident-light meter (pictured at right), not the amount leaving the scene. Whereas ''scene'' reflectance (the
albedo Albedo ( ; ) is the fraction of sunlight that is Diffuse reflection, diffusely reflected by a body. It is measured on a scale from 0 (corresponding to a black body that absorbs all incident radiation) to 1 (corresponding to a body that reflects ...
of the objects being photographed) have no influence on the illuminance (lux value) arriving at any given scene, reflective surfaces ''along the path'' between a flash device and a scene, such as light-colored ceilings, do have an influence. Guide numbers are often calculated by manufacturers for optimum results in average indoor settings. Cameras' built-in reflected-light meters are not a definitive measure of exposure. For example, using a camera with a through-the-lens meter to photograph a park bench surrounded by sunlit snow underexposes the image, making the bench appear nearly black and the snow as dark as grass and foliage. This is because reflected-light meters are calibrated for an average scene reflectance of 18% and do not give good results for scenes with non-average reflectance. A
gray card A gray card is a middle gray reference, typically used together with a reflective light meter, as a way to produce consistent image exposure and/or color in video production, film, and photography. A gray card is a flat object of a neutral-gr ...
and
light meter A light meter (or illuminometer) is a device used to measure the amount of light. In photography, an exposure meter is a light meter coupled to either a Digital data, digital or analog calculator which displays the correct shutter speed and f-nu ...
can be used for better calibration. Guide number distances are always measured from the ''flash device'' to the subject; if the flash device is detached from the camera, the position of the camera is irrelevant. Furthermore, unless a flash device has an automatic zoom feature that follows the setting of a camera's zoom lens, guide numbers do not vary with the focal length of lenses. When manufacturers of flash devices provide guide numbers ratings specified relative to ISO 200, this increases them by the square root of the difference, or a 41 percent increase relative to those given at ISO 100.


Effect of power settings

Most modern electronic flash devices have manually adjustable power settings. Moreover, virtually all modern on-camera flash devices that have manually adjustable power settings also provide either a built-in mechanical circular calculator (such as shown in the photo at the top of this article) or a digital display that automatically shows the effect power levels have on f-stop and distance (guide number). Nevertheless, for those who want to master the math, guide numbers diminish from their full-power ratings as the square root of their fractional setting per the following formula: :Full\ power\ GN\times\sqrt=Reduced\ power\ GN :…where :y is the numerator in the fraction of the power setting :x is the denominator in the fraction of the power setting The following is a step-by-step example of using the above formula: Suppose your full-power guide number is 48 (it is irrelevant if it is scaled for meters or feet for this purpose) and the flash device is set to power. Divide 1 by 16 to obtain 0.0625. Take the
square root In mathematics, a square root of a number is a number such that y^2 = x; in other words, a number whose ''square'' (the result of multiplying the number by itself, or y \cdot y) is . For example, 4 and −4 are square roots of 16 because 4 ...
of that (the \sqrt button on a calculator), which equals 0.25, and multiply that by the guide number of 48 to obtain a reduced-power guide number of 12.0. The mathematical relationship between guide numbers and power levels can also be understood using the below alternative formula, which is suitable whenever the numerator in the fractional power setting is 1 (which is usually the case with flash devices): :Full\ power\ GN\div\sqrt x =Reduced\ power\ GN :…where :x is the denominator in the fraction of the power setting Example: Suppose your full-power guide number is 51 and your flash device is set to power. Take the square root of 32 (the \sqrt button on a calculator), which equals approximately 5.657. Divide 51 by 5.657 to obtain a reduced-power guide number of 9.0.


Effect of flash angle (zoom setting)

Many flash devices have auto- or manual-adjust zoom features that permit the illumination angle to be widened (lessening the guide number) to fully illuminate the image area of wide-angle lenses, or narrowed (increasing the guide number) for telephoto lenses. Such coverage angles may be given in degrees but are often expressed as being equivalent to lens focal lengths for full-frame, 35 mm cameras. Manufacturers' advertising practices vary as to the angle of coverage underlying their guide number ratings, in large part because some flash devices can be zoomed whereas others are fixed. Virtually all modern on-camera flash devices with zoomable flash heads also have either a built-in mechanical circular calculator (such as shown in the photo at the top of this article) or a digital display; both automatically show the effect zoom levels have on f-stop and distance (guide number). The optics of flash heads are complex; each manufacture's designs not only have illumination areas that are slightly different, but are the product of differing relative proportions of transmission, diffusion, reflection, and refraction among their optical elements (
flash tube A flashtube (flashlamp) produces an electrostatic discharge with an extremely intense, Coherence (physics), incoherent, full-spectrum white light for a very short time. A flashtube is a glass tube with an electrode at each end and is filled with ...
, reflector,
Fresnel lens A Fresnel lens ( ; ; or ) is a type of composite compact lens (optics), lens which reduces the amount of material required compared to a conventional lens by dividing the lens into a set of concentric annular sections. The simpler Dioptrics, d ...
, and add-on wide-angle adapter). Accordingly, there is no universal formula for precisely calculating how guide numbers diminish from, for instance, a 105 mm setting to 50 mm or 35 mm settings. The below table illustrates the variation in guide numbers depending on zoom level for some select, relatively high-power zoom-capable flash devices. Note A: Flash angle is equivalent to the denoted lens focal length for a full-frame 35 mm camera.


Effect of ISO sensitivity

Among other variables like illumination angle (for devices with zoomable flash heads) and power setting, guide numbers are a function of the ISO sensitivity (film speed or ISO setting on a digital camera). Guide numbers change as the square root of the difference in ISO sensitivity. Accordingly, a greater ISO sensitivity yields a greater guide number. To allow photographers to properly calculate exposures, even older, base-model flash devices have at least a tabular table on the device showing its guide number for a limited range of common ISO sensitivities. Today, the state of the art has advanced so that with the exception of the least expensive models, virtually all modern on-camera flash devices feature either a built-in mechanical circular calculator (such as shown in the photo at the top of this article) or—more modern yet—a digital display; both methods automatically calculate the effect ISO settings have on f-stop and distance (guide number). Such features make it exceedingly easy to find a suitable combination of f-stop and distance so photographers seldom need to concern themselves with the mathematical details underlying how their flash devices' guide number changes with different ISO sensitivities. Still, it can be helpful when comparing flash devices to understand how guide numbers vary with ISO sensitivity. Usually manufacturers state their products' guide number ratings relative to an ISO sensitivity of 100. However, some manufacturers of flash devices may provide guide numbers ratings specified relative to ISO 200, which increases its guide number by 41 percent relative to those given at ISO 100. The below table shows the proportional change in a flash device's guide number relative to both ISO 100 and ISO 200. The extremely high guide numbers shown in the right-hand portion of the table have a limited real-world ability to extend flash distances. As the above photo illustrates, the ''f-number × distance'' reciprocal relationship breaks down when on-camera flash devices that are set to full or near-full power are used in combination with cameras set to very high ISO sensitivities and large apertures (exceedingly long distances). ISO settings like 102,400 can yield guide numbers in excess of 1220 (m) / 4000 (ft) that seldom if ever permit extremely long-range flash photography due to particulates and aerosols typically present in outside air that fog images with haze glare and attenuate the reach of the light. Except in unusual atmospheric conditions, extraordinarily large guide numbers will produce suitable results only by either positioning the flash device off-axis from the camera by a fair distance or by shooting at the smallest apertures. Note B: The ISO sensitivities shown in this table are their common nomenclature values; their actual underlying values may be slightly different, such as ISO 250, which is actually approximately 252.


Effect of filters

Filters reduce guide numbers regardless of whether they are
gels A gel is a semi-solid that can have properties ranging from soft and weak to hard and tough. Gels are defined as a substantially dilute cross-linked system, which exhibits no flow when in the steady state, although the liquid phase may still ...
placed over the flash device or are lens filters on the camera. Flash devices may come with detachable color-correction gels or filters to match the color of the flash with different types of ambient lighting such as incandescent and fluorescent. Some modern flash devices can even detect when color-correction gels have been attached and automatically compensate for their effect on guide numbers. Unless a hot shoe-mounted electronic flash device's power can be controlled by a camera via through-the-lens metering (TTL), guide numbers must be manually compensated for the effect of on-lens filters. Even with TTL, non-average scenery such as off-center subjects with distant backgrounds or scenery with elements that have non-average reflectance can confound TTL metering. However, such situations cannot confound guide number equations. For instance, a typical polarizing filter, which attenuates 1–1.5 f-stops, will diminish guide numbers to 71–60% of their unfiltered rating. Guide numbers diminish as the square root of filter attenuation in f-stops, as per the following formula: :GN\times\sqrt=Filtered\ GN :...where n equals the filter's rated loss in f-stops. The below table provides some common filter values. When a flash device is set to manual (M) or automatic (A) exposure mode and is not being controlled via the camera's through-the-lens metering, a convenient way to compensate for the effect of a lens-mounted filter is to set the ISO rating on a camera to a higher value than the flash device. For instance, if a polarizing filter attenuates by 1 f-stop and the flash device is set to ISO 100, then the camera can simply be set to ISO 200. The extra camera sensitivity compensates for the loss due to the filter. The formula governing this relationship is as follows: :Flash\ ISO\times2^=Camera\ ISO :…where n equals the camera filter's rated loss in f-stops. Here is a step-by-step example of using this formula: Suppose a filter attenuates by f-stops and the flash device is set to ISO 100. Take 2 and raise it to the power of 1.3333 (using the x^y button on a scientific calculator), which is approximately 2.5198, and then multiply that by 100, which equals about 252. The nearest standard camera setting is ISO 250.


Effect of shutter speeds


With electronic flash

When electronic flash devices based on
flashtube A flashtube (flashlamp) produces an electrostatic discharge with an extremely intense, incoherent, full-spectrum white light for a very short time. A flashtube is a glass tube with an electrode at each end and is filled with a gas that, when tr ...
technology are used with most modern cameras (those with
focal-plane shutter In camera design, a focal-plane shutter (FPS) is a type of photographic shutter that is positioned immediately in front of the focal plane of the camera, that is, right in front of the photographic film or image sensor. Two-curtain shutters ...
s), shutter speed has no effect on guide numbers. (A notable exception is when a flash device at full power is used in combination with cameras equipped with leaf shutters set to very brief exposure times.) This is because even at the most powerful settings, flash durations seldom exceed a few milliseconds (thousandths of a second). With focal-plane shutters, a flash begins shortly after the shutter curtain has fully opened and must extinguish before the curtain begins to close. Selecting any shutter speed faster than the camera's rated X-sync speed, which is often between and of a second (from as long as 16.7 milliseconds to as little as 5.0 milliseconds) causes the shutter curtain to begin wiping closed across the film or sensor before the flash has extinguished. When this happens, an underexposed, gradated band appears along an edge of the image—often trailing off darker towards the left or bottom, as seen in the photo at top right. Conversely, longer exposures also have no effect on guide number. After the flash has extinguished, longer shutter speeds will only increase the contribution from continuous ambient light, which can lead to ghosting with moving subjects.


With flashbulbs

Shutter speeds influence guide numbers when using flashbulbs due to their relatively long flash durations. Vintage flashbulbs, though no longer made, are still available and have a niche following, largely because even medium-size bulbs such as the once-popular General Electric Synchro-Press had huge light outputs on the order of 23,000 lumen⋅seconds—far exceeding the most powerful of today's hot shoe-mounted electronic flash devices. At a relatively slow shutter speed of of a second (40 milliseconds), the GE had a guide number of 97.5 (m) / 320 (ft) at ISO 100 when using a typical 6- or 7-inch-diameter (150–175 mm) polished reflector. With peak powers often between one and two million lumens, many young
baby boomers Baby boomers, often shortened to boomers, are the demographic cohort preceded by the Silent Generation and followed by Generation X. The generation is often defined as people born from 1946 to 1964 during the mid-20th century baby boom that ...
chased after fairylike retinal bleached spots (a symptom of flash blindness) for minutes after having their pictures taken at close distance with flashbulbs of the era. If one wanted the benefit of all the light produced by a flashbulb (highest possible guide number), relatively long exposure times were required because most flashbulbs didn't stop producing useful amounts of light until 20–90 milliseconds (ms) after electrical current was applied. The GE flashbulb for instance, was a Class M (medium peak) bulb, which were designed to produce peak luminous fluxes 20 ms after firing (see the graph at lower right). The was intended for
leaf shutter In photography, a shutter is a device that allows light to pass for a determined period, exposing photographic film or a photosensitive digital sensor to light in order to capture a permanent image of a scene. A shutter can also be used to allow ...
-type cameras and M sync photoflash triggering, which gave M bulbs a head start by delaying the opening of the shutter so any given camera's fastest exposure time would be centered at the 20 ms point (an 18.75 ms delay for instance, for a definitional camera capable of second exposures, or 2.5 ms). The GE stopped producing useful amounts of light roughly 50 ms after current was applied. Thus, a camera with a fastest shutter speed of of a second (one that began exposures 18.75 ms after a bulb was fired with M sync triggering), and which was set to of a second, would close its shutter 59 ms after triggering a flashbulb (18.75 ms + 40 ms = 58.75 ms) and would achieve the maximum rated guide number from the . So long as one used flashbulbs with leaf shutter-type cameras, faster exposures and larger apertures could be used to minimize motion blur or reduce
depth of field The depth of field (DOF) is the distance between the nearest and the farthest objects that are in acceptably sharp focus (optics), focus in an image captured with a camera. See also the closely related depth of focus. Factors affecting depth ...
at the expense of guide number. In the case of the GE Synchro-Press with M sync for instance, shutter speeds as long as of a second still diminished its guide number, though it still managed an impressive 140 (ft) at a second exposure. This relationship between shutter speed and guide number was reflected in the guide number tables printed on flashbulb packaging after the industry-wide adoption of the guide number system, as exemplified by the below-left table for the . Cameras with focal-plane shutters—even if they had PC connectors with X, F, M, or S-sync delays ("xenon sync" with zero delay and flashbulbs with peak delays of 5, 20, and 30 ms)—could not be used at speeds that attenuated guide numbers with most types of flashbulbs because their light curves were characterized by rapid rise and fall rates; the second shutter curtain would begin wiping shut during a period of rapid change in scene illuminance, causing uneven exposure across the image area that varied in nature depending on exposure duration and the type of bulb. With the GE Synchro-Press for instance, a modern camera with a focal-plane shutter and X sync would require a shutter speed of of a second (67 ms) to obtain an even exposure across the entire image area—and a not-insignificant boost in the guide number by capturing all the luminous energy to the left of the 20 ms peak. A notable exception to this limitation with focal-plane shutters was when using FP sync in combination with "flat peak" (FP) bulbs, which had rise times followed by broad, relatively level plateaus in their light output curves. The FP bulbs, like GE's , allowed extraordinary flexibility with shutter speeds, ranging from the slowest speeds on the dial to the fastest where only a narrow slit passed over the film—at the expense of course, of guide number.


History

General Electric introduced the guide number system in 1939 concurrently with the introduction of a compact, wire-filled flashbulb called the ''Popular Photography'', May 1957, p. 137''Minicam'', Vol. 3 (1939), p. 17. Note that the article title on page 20 was "SIMPLIFIED FLASH EXPOSURE TABLES" and, using GE's early terminology, referred to guide numbers as "Flash Numbers" (in title case). This compelling new way of easily and accurately calculating photoflash exposures was quickly adopted by manufacturers of a wide variety of photographic equipment, including flashbulbs, film, cameras, and flashguns. The first flashbulb was introduced in 1925 and was filled with
flash powder Flash powder is a pyrotechnic composition, a mixture of an oxidizer and a metallic fuel, which burns quickly (deflagrates) and produces a loud noise, regardless of confinement in some formulations. It is widely used in theatrical and display pyro ...
. In 1929, Sashalite Limited in London invented the "Sashalite" flashbulb, which was filled with a crumpled wad of aluminum foil so thin (about one-tenth the width of a human hair) it could not be picked up with fingers. Prior to GE's ''inverse of the squares'' innovation, photographers and publications—via tedious trial and error with different flashbulbs and reflectors—generated tables providing a large number of aperture-distance combinations. For instance, a 1940 edition (written too late to incorporate guide numbers) of the ''Complete Introduction to Photography'' by the Journal of the Photographic Society of America featured an exposure table for foil-filled flashbulbs, which is shown below. The parenthetical values in bold were not part of the original table; they show the equivalent guide number for each aperture-distance combination. The original table used the common nomenclature values for the apertures; the guide numbers shown here are based on the precise aperture values from the ^ series. Note the scatter in the guide number values in each column; the data for the right-most flashbulb setup has over a three-quarter f-stop variation from high to low. The above table is for only one film speed. For end users, obtaining proper exposures with flashbulbs was an error-prone effort as they mentally interpolated between distances and f-stop combinations that weren't very accurate in the first place. Had the guide number system existed by this point, the above table would not have required the left-most column showing distances and would have required only one row (showing guide numbers) under each heading. By 1941, two years after GE introduced the guide number system, guide number ratings for products like the GE were being discussed in books like ''Flash in Modern Photography.'' By 1944, the 16th edition of ''Wall's Dictionary of Photography'' featured a guide number table. Perhaps so as to not intimidate readers, that table still showed numerous combinations of distances and apertures, but it also featured a new column showing the guide number that every cell in its row equalled. The guide number system underlying that table drove slightly finer increases, averaging a factor of \sqrt each, from one distance to the next (6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 feet) so each step would be accompanied—by definition—by an increase in aperture of precisely one f-stop. Not surprisingly, the data scatter was as tight as mathematical rounding to the nearest foot permitted. By late 1949, authors catering to hobbyists were using guide numbers in articles in a routine fashion, as exemplified by the January 1950 issue of ''Popular Photography'', as follows: Two years later, ''Flash in Modern Photography'' (1941) used the term "guide number" on page 47, on the very next page used the term "Flash Number" (title case), and later still used the term "flash number" (lowercase). Terminology was similarly mixed in the United Kingdom for years after the introduction of the guide number system; circa 1954, "Flash Factor", "Flash number" (and sometimes "Guide number") were in use.


See also

*
Exposure (photography) In photography, exposure is the amount of light per unit area reaching a frame (photography), frame of photographic film or the surface of an electronic image sensor. It is determined by shutter speed, lens f-number, and scene luminance. Exposure ...
*
Exposure value In photography, exposure value (EV) is a number that represents a combination of a camera's shutter speed and f-number, such that all combinations that yield the same exposure (photography), exposure have the same EV (for any fixed scene luminanc ...
* Flash comparison *
Flash (photography) A flash is a device used in photography that produces a brief burst of light (lasting around of a second) at a color temperature of about 5500 K to help illuminate a scene. The main purpose of a flash is to illuminate a dark scene. Other us ...
*
Flash synchronization In photography, flash synchronization or flash sync is the synchronizing the firing of a photographic flash with the opening of the shutter admitting light to photographic film or electronic image sensor. In cameras with mechanical (clock ...
*
Flashtube A flashtube (flashlamp) produces an electrostatic discharge with an extremely intense, incoherent, full-spectrum white light for a very short time. A flashtube is a glass tube with an electrode at each end and is filled with a gas that, when tr ...


References


Further reading

* Bryan Peterson, ''Understanding Flash Photography: How to Shoot Great Photographs Using Electronic Flash'', (paperback – August 30, 2011), Amphoto Books,


External links


D. 'n' A. Seaver:

Conley cameras
'
Photographic Memorabilia:

Scantips.com:
* [http://www.scantips.com/ Scantips.com:
''EV – Exposure Value (with EV table and EV calculator)''

Sekonic.com:''EV/Lux/FootCandle Conversion Chart''
{{Photography Flash photography Photographic lighting Light sources