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General Photography
Wedding
First Wedding In June (Continued from Flashes Forum)
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<blockquote data-quote="rocketman122" data-source="post: 462160" data-attributes="member: 14443"><p>hey Phil</p><p></p><p>ok I can understand him. there are many times you dont even need to use stands. take a look at this image. I shot this conference for architects on monday morning. my lady set up this job for me. look where I placed one flash. the other flash (not seen in the pic obviously) is on the other side on the counter as well.</p><p>[ATTACH]162590[/ATTACH][ATTACH]162602[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>see if you can find a place to place them somewhere. u have the base/stand that came with each flash. you should also consider getting some grips like in the video, including a flash umbrella bracket.</p><p></p><p></p><p>you dont need the battery pack actually. u can use it if youre a quick multiple frames shooter. I never had the need to shoot more than 2-3 pics in a row. and it handled it more than fine, even at 1/16 power.</p><p>place them somewhere where they dont bother. if you place them in one of the seating isle (where there arent many people, then people wont walk into them and itll be safe. if you place it in the aisle then sure, people are blind and dont notice anything around them. but I havent seen any ceremony where the church seating is full. </p><p></p><p>try at f/16. you dont need them to be main/key lights. just a little blanket of light to help keep the light spread all over. look at pic number one above. flash fall off is very obvious. and obvious overexposure on the lady. if you have light bouncing up (multiple flashes) to spread all over, you will get more uniform light. I dont want to complicate things but u may even want directional light at times for creative pics. stay safe and go soft though. not sure how strong you are with having and image in mind and knowing how to configure thiungs in the camera on the fly during stress. some people just piss their pants.</p><p></p><p>so basically stay at 1/16 power. if its too strong then close your aperture but keep the iso a bit up so the camera can also get the ambient. keep your shutter up also. 1/125-200 depending on the FL. f/3.5 for snipping people (70-200) and 4.5+ when shooting wide. if youre shooting a wa static shot, lower the output of your SB910 (sitting on camera) flash by 1-2 stops and lower shutter (1/60) to let ambient light in. you wrote "pro" so these are things im guessing you deal with regularly. knowing EC and FEC is 101 school.</p><p></p><p>watch your wb because the wood will bounce off some of that color. make the necessary adjustments later in PP. dont shoot raw so not too familiar. if it goes crazy on you then just set kelvin at 4400 or so.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://youtu.be/ehfnXZWoezg" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/ehfnXZWoezg</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rocketman122, post: 462160, member: 14443"] hey Phil ok I can understand him. there are many times you dont even need to use stands. take a look at this image. I shot this conference for architects on monday morning. my lady set up this job for me. look where I placed one flash. the other flash (not seen in the pic obviously) is on the other side on the counter as well. [ATTACH=CONFIG]162590[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]162602[/ATTACH] see if you can find a place to place them somewhere. u have the base/stand that came with each flash. you should also consider getting some grips like in the video, including a flash umbrella bracket. you dont need the battery pack actually. u can use it if youre a quick multiple frames shooter. I never had the need to shoot more than 2-3 pics in a row. and it handled it more than fine, even at 1/16 power. place them somewhere where they dont bother. if you place them in one of the seating isle (where there arent many people, then people wont walk into them and itll be safe. if you place it in the aisle then sure, people are blind and dont notice anything around them. but I havent seen any ceremony where the church seating is full. try at f/16. you dont need them to be main/key lights. just a little blanket of light to help keep the light spread all over. look at pic number one above. flash fall off is very obvious. and obvious overexposure on the lady. if you have light bouncing up (multiple flashes) to spread all over, you will get more uniform light. I dont want to complicate things but u may even want directional light at times for creative pics. stay safe and go soft though. not sure how strong you are with having and image in mind and knowing how to configure thiungs in the camera on the fly during stress. some people just piss their pants. so basically stay at 1/16 power. if its too strong then close your aperture but keep the iso a bit up so the camera can also get the ambient. keep your shutter up also. 1/125-200 depending on the FL. f/3.5 for snipping people (70-200) and 4.5+ when shooting wide. if youre shooting a wa static shot, lower the output of your SB910 (sitting on camera) flash by 1-2 stops and lower shutter (1/60) to let ambient light in. you wrote "pro" so these are things im guessing you deal with regularly. knowing EC and FEC is 101 school. watch your wb because the wood will bounce off some of that color. make the necessary adjustments later in PP. dont shoot raw so not too familiar. if it goes crazy on you then just set kelvin at 4400 or so. [url]https://youtu.be/ehfnXZWoezg[/url] [/QUOTE]
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First Wedding In June (Continued from Flashes Forum)
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