Flash Bracket S-050 This is a universal flash bracket for the studio use.Fitting for any light stand or Tripod (1/4" screw or 3/8" screw).This mount can allow you adjust the flash and umbrella in any angle you like to take a great shot of your pictures.

Specifications:
Original Design -- Built-in Gear of the Junction,Which Offering Damping to Aviod Flash Falling too Fast When You unlock the Bracket.And That may Damage your Flash.
Compatible -- With 1/4" and 3/8" Screw, Suitable for Light Stand, Tripod Stand, Ball Head, Flash Trigger, Quick Realease Plate and Other Photography Equipment Connection.Release Your Inner Imagination and Help Your to Create Some Wonderful Photoes.
Adjustable -- Rotatable Design allow 180 Degree Max flexibility.
Durable -- Use High Quality Aluminum Alloy and CNC Technology,Strong and Resistant to Corrosion.Can be use with Strobe Flash.
Accurate -- Within a Umbrella Hole,Can be Use with Umbrella.And make Output of Light be More Uniform Hit to the Object.


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Why Use a Flash Bracket?
When you go to a wedding and see the photographer taking portraits of the bride and groom, you will see them using a flash bracket. They are not trying to look fancy. The bracket allows them to take better photographs Function: A flash bracket is a device that allows an external flash unit to be lifted away from the camera, eliminating "red-eye" and grotesque shadows. Benefits: Built-in camera flashes and external flashes mounted on the camera's hot shoe are notorious for producing "red-eye" because the flash is so close to the camera lens. Because a flash bracket moves the flash away from the lens, the light hits the eye at a different angle and "red-eye" is not produced Considerations: Shooting vertical pictures with a hot-shoe mounted external flash, will produce noticeable shadows because the flash's position to the side of the lens instead of above the lens. That shadow can be distracting when it shows on the wall behind the subject, or worse yet for people photography, under the eyes of the subject Types: Some flash brackets, called flip brackets, have a rotating arm that allows the flash to be positioned over the camera whether you are shooting horizontally or vertically. There are also brackets that allow the photographer to rotate the camera Misconceptions: Wedding photographers are not the only photographers to use flash brackets. Nature photographers use them to avoid the animal version of "red-eye" and in macro, or close-up, photography