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21st September 2017, 05:33 PM
#1
Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
Portrait taken indoor near a window and on camera flash. Post processing done according to my skill and knowledge such as WB, exposure, noise reduction and sharpening.
ISO500, 50 mm, f2.5, 1/125
Last edited by KWM; 25th September 2017 at 02:44 PM.
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21st September 2017, 07:10 PM
#2
Moderator
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
A few thoughts for you on this shot:
1. Your model is too close to the background. Notice the shadows behind her head. Generally I like to keep models at least 2 metres away from the background to reduce this problem.
2. This is a mixed light situation. Notice how the tones on the camera left side are much warmer than the tones on the camera right side. The daylight coming through the window has a noticeably warmer colour temperature than your flash (around 5500K).
Mixed lighting like this cannot be colour corrected all that easily. A common practice would be to put a fractional CTO (Colour Temperature Orange) gel over your flash to get a more balanced colour temperature. Other techniques that either eliminate the flash (a white reflector) or a pure flash shot with no ambient light would work too.
3. Your on-camera flash is not a particularly good light source for this type of photography. In emergencies, I will sometimes use it as a fill light when shooting outdoors, but I will generally use a different (larger) light source that is off-camera. Direct flash, whether it is the built in camera flash or a small flash mounted on the camera are "small light sources" and produce a very hard light.
4. Having your subject's hair just touch the top of the frame is not all that effective. Either leave a bit of a gap or cropping into the hair a bit more will work better.
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21st September 2017, 07:16 PM
#3
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
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21st September 2017, 10:25 PM
#4
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
Nice work on the exposure, if you were shooting with tripod you could've reduced ISO and perhaps maintained more detail; as shown a bit too soft in most areas.
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22nd September 2017, 12:49 PM
#5
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
KWM, I think you might have created a difficult lighting scenario (two light sources with different colour temperature) when a reflector would have produced better results.
Alternatively, you could have turned the model slightly towards the light (not facing the window but at a bit of an angle) and just used natural light.
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22nd September 2017, 11:22 PM
#6
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
+1 to all of the above comments
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25th September 2017, 02:43 PM
#7
Re: Indoor portrait using window light and builtin flash - C&C
Thanks for the feedback guys. Much appreciated.
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