The pic is a bit hot. Drop the iso a little. You might need a soft box or better diffuser.
Do you think it's over exposed? Dont forget I have LR to fix stuff.
The pic is a bit hot. Drop the iso a little. You might need a soft box or better diffuser.
Your second picture is much better. Not trying to offend
I know you weren't @weebee , .I just thought maybe your "clarity" slider was stuck in overdrive. LOL
After looking at my adjustments on my desk top I can see your point. Damn, I need a better laptop.
Your second picture is much better.But still a touch washed out. Not trying to offend.
Been practicing with bounce flash. I have the white card pulled out half way. I'm happy that there are no shadows but I'm not happy with the skin tone. seems a bit white. I have the WB set to auto in camera and fixing it in LR for now.
Even when I have the WB set to "flash" I still get much too warm coloring. I fixed it best I could. Also I think F/1.8 might be a bit soft.
Went back again today. Practice was terrible. This place is like a cave, I pushed the ISO up to 1600, took the shutter speed down to 125, plus I had the flash at +2 compensation. Shots are noisy as shit!!
Even at ISO 800 as soon as I started pulling shadows and things the noise is tolerable, but as soon as I add a touch of sharpening it all goes to hell.
This is an old country church with horrible lighting. I don't know what else to do. I took @rocketman122's advice, plus all the things I've been learning.
The only thing I can think of is renting a D610 with a Nikkor 24-70 for a week.
Anyone thinking of doing a wedding in a cave with a D7100 and an 18-140, should just shoot themselves without delay.![]()
I want to try to understand how the ceremony is and if the BG stand like in the lovely pic I drew here. the round ball is the preists head sticking out the back of the stand and the BG are with no heads but are standing oin the same level as the seats?
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in this picture they would be with their backs towards us? is this how the ceremony will be?
look, you can do it simply and just fire the flash straight forward (not bounced) and not do anything besides that. adjust the flash as you go because the TTL isnt always accurate. keep your iso at 800 f4-5 125 shutter and shoot as it is. it may not be the time to try to get aesthetics fine tuned now and better to go safe. it may be too much technical stuff to try and learn now and you cant believe how much stress you have when youre there and things are moving fast. youll be sh*****g bricks from stress. I wouldnt be stressed but for someone who doesnt do it all the time, you forget everything.
AHAHAHAHA!! hilarious!
when youre MINIMUM requirements for natural light (camera only-no flash) is at the absolute limite youre willing to push it and you still cant get proper exposure, tis time to flash. meaning when you cant get what you want only with the camera, you leave the exposure at what youre willing to accept and then you add flash as much as you need to get the exposure properly.
if youre at the slowest shutter speed (to not get blur) at the widest aperture (that will allow enough depth for focus) and the highest iso (without extreme grain/noise) then youre camera cant do it by itself. its time to add more and more flash till you get there. you will have to add more than one flash.
in this post here
http://nikonites.com/wedding/28411-first-wedding-june-continued-flashes-forum.html
OP is shooting in a church and I recommended (scroll down a bit) he use two flashes on the sides of the church. youll have to add them strategically in your church. fire them in manual mode. to me it seems like one flash is just not enough. you can shoot flash straight on and it should be fine. but youll get hard flash shadows. its up to you. I like soft light. but it depends on your budget. I think you can get away with your current gear and instead of renting a ff setup, invest it in another flash or even two and a set of slaves like the excellent and inexpensive 603II by yongnuo and flashes they have like the 560III which have a receiver in them already. it will make the world of difference. shoot at iso 800 but youll have to use more flash. you dont even need stands really. you can place it on a table (or even the floor) somehwere on the sides aimed up into the ceiling in the area where the couple will stand.
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from the pictures u posted, your ceiling isnt high like here so thats a plus