In a message dated 9/5/03 7:21:52 PM Central Daylight Time, elf@cape.com writes: << I dunno. I went to a workshop at the NPPA Northern Short Course the topic of which was how to manage shooting a feature portrait for the food/sports/fashion/arts sections with two hotlights or one and a reflector. when you have 4 minutes during the interview by the feature article writer. The teacher had worked his entire life for a New York City newspaper. And I shot basketball for a season next to the regional paper shooter who showed with two light stands that extended to 25 feet and two radio fired strobes with power packs. He did that for night football too. He tied the light stands off to the bleachers and tripped them with his on camera flash which was aimed into the sky or at an angle. He shot a New Year's First Night parade with the same rig and an assistant. Tied the stands to trees and used rear curtain flash to catch the 10-person dragon in motion. So I dunno. Seems to me that phojos at even medium sized newspapers use professional lighting equipment professionally. -- Emily L. Ferguson mailto:elf@cape.com >> I have been doing an apprenticeship with a staffer for the Dallas Morning News and I can say for a fact that not everyone shoots with setups like this. For basketball and sports stuff they either shoot available light or with strobes way high up that are on remote systems. They have someone that specializes in food as well as someone for fashion and they have an in-house studio with a lighting system for table top and for fashion. When we went to shoot a set-up shot of Raphael Palmeiro, the photographer did bring your basic portrait set-up, but the reason he did this shoot as opposed to the guy that I am actually apprenticing with is because he is good at that sort of thing. The guy I work with does use your basic flash unit, not studio set-up stuff. Another girl that I have done a press conference with and some other indoor stuff did not use flash at all except towards the very end of the press conference for one particular shot. She prefers not to use flash unless necessary. All of their equipment is supplied by the paper, by the way. Anyway, that's what I know of the newspaper industry, and I also know that not every staffer at the paper uses flash. Some choose not to. Leslie Spurlock <A HREF="http://lesliescottphotography.com/">Leslie Scott Photography</A> <A HREF="http://www.lesliescottphotography.com/phototours.htm">Leslie Scott Photography and Tours</A> 1-888-381-0854 lscottpht@aol.com