So I was hanging out swilling my AM Cuppa one day and decided to set up this little deal.
If I had to (or could) remember, I have probably seen something like this on the web somewhere, but I just wanted to do it myself, see what I came up with, make some observations, and go from there.
The first thing that is typically mentioned about on-camera flash is not to use it. I would say that myself. But let’s face it, in the “real world” you can’t always shoot under ideal or controlled conditions. Bad/mixed/harsh lighting, bad backgrounds, the whole ball of wax!
At my particular stage I see photography as, at its base, a “problem”. As photographers I believe it is up to us to “solve” the “problem”! The more we shoot, the more we understand the nature of the “problem” and can use better “solutions” to solve it. On-site, in-camera and in post are all “solutions” we have to solve the basic “problem”. This is what we hope will separate what we do from Uncle Bob firing the same shot with his pocket popper set on “Auto”!
If I want/need to use a flash, I can’t always put it on a stand, stuff it in a modifier, and get it off-camera! I don’t really even like to hand hold a flash because the lens/body I am using is oft-times too heavy to hold easily with one hand. And if you are shooting “run and gun”, then forget off-camera. On-camera flash is one alternative and under the right conditions I believe it’s not the Evil Light everyone claims.
So I just wanted mostly wanted to yutz around a little with bounced on camera flash to get some directional on-camera light going on.
I wanted to use a real model. I couldn’t find one and this is the only one I could afford to hire! Please meet Miss Wanda Wigstan!
I fired a reference shot with a gray card for WB. I got different WB’s because I picked up some of the color from the bounce surfaces. I was mostly interested in the direction of the light rather than worrying about color balance. I probably should have used a ¼ or ½ CTO on the flash but was too lazy. I bounced off the walls, a large white foam board (to simulate a wall, I had an open walkway where I wanted to bounce on one side, and the ceiling.
All shot with ETTL @ f/2.8, 1/125, 200mm, ISO200, and a FEC of +1-2/3 with the exception of the flash gun shot. The flash was zoomed all the way down to 105mm. This was for maximum efficiency. Shot from approx. 10 ft. away with the background approx. 15 ft behind Miss Wanda. All processed with only some capture & output sharpening, a gentle S-Curve, and white balance using a reference card. Some exposure/highlight adjustment when needed. I cropped them as close to the same as I could to be able to scroll them through Lytebox for comparison.
I flagged my hot shoe flash with a piece of square foam wrapped around three sides of the flash and held in place with a rubber band. This was to keep any direct light from hitting Miss Wanda. If she could see my flash tube, the she would be receiving direct light. Being the quiet type, she wouldn’t say whether she saw it or not!
A couple of problems with Miss Wanda- She has catch lights painted in her eyes so I couldn’t gauge the catch lights. This is a biggie for me so I’ll probably repeat the exercise with a real subject. A lack of hair, not really much for eye sockets. But, she helped me see what I was looking for, which was where the shadows fell and how harsh they would be. At least she doesn't whine much!
Short Side Lighting-
The side of the face away from the camera is lit. Bounced off of the wall camera right. I tried to get the bounce point slightly behind Miss Wanda.
Broad Side-
The side of the face nearest the camera is lit. Bounced off a wall camera left.
Top@ 45*-
45* toward Miss Wanda bounced off the ceiling. Theoretically there should be shadows in the eye sockets (if she had any) but there is a pretty harsh shadow under the neck.
Top Straight Up-
The shadow under the neck is getting softer.
Top Angled behind @ 45*-
Nicer than full on, but starting to look a little flat to me.
Behind @ Level-
Still nice but a little flat. I’m surprised she didn’t pick up my shadow.
Full Straight on-
I just nuked Miss Wanda. No bounce. Hard shadow on the BG (15’ away) among other things.
Theoretically, once a bounced flash hits the bounce surface, the bounced light becomes a large light source. Therefore a softer light source.
I would be a fan of Short side lighting! Slimming and complementary, especially for women. Simply bounce the light toward the direction the subject is turned.
Broad side maybe useful for males.
Top (angled back/behind would be good for older subjects maybe helping to mitigate some wrinkles, etc. Maybe as a “glamour” type of lighting, and for groups.
Just a couple of comments from my end. I have more but I’ll just let anyone draw their own conclusions or make their own comments if they so desire.
Mostly, this was just fun exercise when I had nothing better to do!