I raised a thread a short time ago with regard to using flash indoor under specific backlit situations in preparation for a project I had been asked to do. Following the excellent advice I received, the purchase of another flash, three days of practice at home and lots of reading I have undertaken the first session of the work.
My brief for the session was to provide pictures that show disabled/impaired young children undertaking classroom learning, play, physiotherapy etc in a positive manner, not child portraits and not staged scenes. Spaces varied from large, small to minute with lighting from poor to poor.
Here's an update as to how I tackled things, specific findings and those that I will address for the next session.
Equipment use and method
The D800 was set in manual (
my regular mode) giving me full control of shutter speed, I wanted as near 1/250th (sync speed) to eliminate camera shake/subject movement where ambient light was predominant. I also wanted full control of aperture for low DoF. ISO was varied when necessary.
I varied exposure for the ambient light, e.g window with bright light in the frame, by offsetting the exposure bar and not by adjusting camera EV. By not adjusting camera EV, it appears the flash EV is not affected (
I will confirm this once I get a new battery in my flash meter).
The flash was in iTTL mode throughout and I used the SB600 although having the new Rollei with me in case I found I needed more power. No diffuser was used on the flash based upon an article I had read. I did not adjust the flash EV once and the few exposure failures encountered were down to me.
Having read some excellent articles online I decided that I would not just bounce the flash straight ahead from a ceiling but from any wall/corner that could be used.
This setup enabled me to concentrate on the job and move around freely, and again I found myself spending a lot of time on the floor
Problems encountered to address
a) Colour balancing
Many walls were from bright blue to sickly orange and some results require colour balancing. Test edit work so far is suggesting simple white balance correction using a known white/black in the scene works and I have no knowledge/practice of other methods.
I hope to standardise a method to ensure the skin tones remain equal.
b) Ghosting
A couple of images taken where activity involved movement (
e.g throwing a ball) have ghosting on the moving part which so far I'm putting down to the shutter speed being too low to freeze movement recorded by the ambient light but then frozen by the flash.
c) Catchlights
These vary from good to not so good. There are some instances where there are two that I suspect are coming from both the flash location and the bounced flash light location. I will experiment to learn more about this and also have the option to place the flash on an L bracket and trigger it from the popup.
But overall, the results achieved with lighting that was even, had no harsh shadow lines, good exposures giving easily workable images in post and most importantly the content of many of the captures exceeded my expectations.
Grahame