That's my point though; I've assumed that you'd only use EL / FEL because the normal metering wasn't giving you the correct result - which leads me to "why wasn't the normal metering giving you the correct result?" And all I could conclude was "possibly because you don't yet fully understand how it works - the types of things that upset it - how they upset it - and how to compensate for it". I honestly can't remember the last time I had to use that button; it's probably well over 5 years ago -- all I ever need to do is dial in a correct amount of EC, and I'd eat my hat if that wasn't all you needed to to too. At the end of the day, so long as you're getting the right exposures than that's all that matters, but EL is a "one-shot" thing, whereas EC / FEC stays in place until cancelled - and that's a LOT faster if your set is under the same or similar lighting and/or conditions.
Just make sure they're compatible with the flash beforehand.yeah i'll be getting through batteries like there's no tomorrow i reckon - had a decent box 40 aa's held back for some months & not yet opened so they'll start me off - but i'll take as many charged ones as i can get my hands on too
This one has been bugging me. I don't use auto-ISO a lot (and even less with a flash) and I just couldn't think of a valid technical reason why it would be limited to 400. So I did some Googling for quite a while - read a lot of things - and came to a deep and meaningful understanding that nobody else really understand why either. Not to be out-done, I asked Canon's technical guru Chuck Westfall (who was kind enough to answer my eMail even though he's still on Christmas break) and ...im only using auto iso without the flash, it was just a comment that i made about how mounting the flash then makes the iso a constant of 400.
... nobody has ever given him a technical explanation either. So I suspect that one is destined to die with the team who wrote the code. The 1D X is getting a MAJOR firmware upgrade in a few weeks, so who knows - perhaps they'll upen it up for my camera then - will have to wait and see.
Regardless, I still can't see any valid reason for needing auto-ISO with flash in a wedding shoot environment, so you should be fine with manual ISO selection.
Well that's certainly made my day! First time I've come across someone essentially saying "please shoot my wedding - I'll pay you - I know you haven't done one before, so I don't mind what kind of result we get". What a great guy; personally I'd be looking for the hidden camera because I'd be thinking I was being set up!on another note, ive had some email exchanges with the groom today over dates/times to meet him & the bride - when i mentioned that part of the reason to meet them both is to discuss their expectations he informed me that "they dont have expectations because this is my first wedding". i've got further questions to put to them surrounding what they want, how they want me to execute it, timings, list of images (to name just some), but none the less his words today were welcoming