![]() ![]() There are a million ways to approach it, but that's what I found worked for us. Awesome end results as you got great pictures taken "before the flash made everyone blink", but end users got the flash effect they were expecting. Then set the script so that as soon as the camera captured it's shot the LEDs would jump to 80% then drop to 20%, and finally return to normal 50%. Left the lighting on all the time at say 50% (which was more than enough anyway since the LEDs were super bright) and set my capture code so the camera would get a perfect shot at that light level. In the end due to that feedback I replaced the light box with strip LEDs and PWM driven MOSFETs from a USB-attached micro (could probably have generated the PWM using the PI itself but I had the Micro lying around for something else so). Worked great, biggest issue was people were "expecting a flash" and the beep that I had wasn't obvious enough. In my setup I started with a light box at the top of the booth and just had some super bright CFLs behind white fabric to diffuse it. ![]() I built one as a project for our wedding and ended up renting it out to others for a year or two after, so if you do it well it is definitely viable. Upload on the site a photo of you, result from the camera of your smartphone, webcam, camera or a scanning of a paper photo. Using warez version, crack, warez passwords, patches, serial numbers, registration codes, key generator, pirate key, keymaker or keygen for Webcam Photobooth 2. ![]() As mentioned by others forget the flash, the best approach is decent ambient lighting. ![]()
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