Just in time for this week's "Flowers and Trees" challenge, some flowers and trees showed up in my yard! Always takes longer for things to bloom up on our mountaintop compared to the areas below, so I wasn't sure if they'd arrive in time. But they were very considerate this year and popped their little heads up a few days ago.
These little beauties are Bleeding Hearts. One spring about 5 years ago they just showed up growing against the side of my garage. We didn't plant them, I've never seen them elsewhere. But there they were. And they bloom every year now.
They actually grow in a very crummy looking spot of my yard. Right on the side of my garage as I said, but also right where the front brick facing in front meets the cracked concrete side. You can't get a good pic without getting all kinds of junk in the background. If you pivot a little for a better angle, you get the driveway and our cars also.
So I decided to try the ol' studio portrait trick of relying on light fall-off. I wasn't gonna lug my soft boxes out, but I just got a set of Rogue Flash Benders on clearance and I figured this would be a good test of them. I set up the biggest one on my Yongnuo speedlight.
The technique is simple: with the flash off, take pics of your scene and adjust the settings until the background is totally black. Don't worry about the subject. Unfortunately there was so much sunlight that even my most extreme available settings still showed some detail. But it was good enough. Then I turned the Flash Bender into a wide snoot, pointed it at the flowers, and switched on the speedlight. At that point I just took a series of pictures, adjusting the power output of the flash until it illuminated the flowers, but the light falloff behind them kept the background dark. When I finally got it dialed in, I used the Luminosity Range mask in Lightroom to turn all the low exposure portions of the photo bright white by dropping the saturation and increasing the exposure.
And it comes out like this:
Just for reference, this is what it looked like before turning the flash on:
Then I went over to a daffodil that was growing alongside a rock on my front lawn. It's on a bit of a slope, so by lying down I could point the camera up at it for a "hero shot" perspective. As luck would have it, the sun was at the right angle that it not only back lit the flower, but I could get it in the shot for effect. I still had the Flash Bender on, and by using a tighter snoot and dropping the flash power to 1/32 I was able to take the front of the flower out of shadow. Without the flash, it looked more like a silhouette:
I have to say, even though this was my first outing with it, I'm pretty impressed with the Flash Bender. Gives a softer light than a speedlight, and wraps around the subject well. Knocks out a fair amount of shadows on subjects that are even rather close to a background wall. I've been lamenting the lack of a pop-up flash on the D500, since I like using it for fill on sunny days. I think this Flash Bender will do a better job, albeit at the cost of having the bulk and weight of a speedlight attached to the body. Still, for outdoor portraits where you can't bring in a strobe or soft boxes, this seems like it will be an acceptable alternative.