Outdoor Speedlight Portraits: Ep. 201: Digital Photography 1 on 1: Adorama Photography TV

Adorama Photography TV presents outdoor speedlight portraits. This week, Mark Wallace teaches you how to adjust flash and ambient exposures separately when using an on-camera speedlight. These are great techniques that apply not only to portraits, but any speedlight photography! Products used in this episode: Canon Speedlite 580EX II, Shoe Mount Flash adorama.com/CA580EX2U.html Canon EOS-7D Digital SLR Camera Body adorama.com/ICA7D.html Nikon SB-900 TTL AF Shoe Mount Speedlight adorama.com/NKSB900AFU.html Nikon D90 12.3 Megapixel Digital SLR adorama.com/INKD90L.html Visit adorama.com/learn for more photography videos! Send your questions to: AskMark@Adorama.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5
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Video Rating: 4 / 5
I think the Nikon D90 can also be set in Aperture Priority mode, then and the ambient light can be compensated separately from the flash has it’s own compensation setting.
look at the pictrure at 7:56, do you see that beautiful tits??!
where do people find these gorgeous models?!?
@tourdumonde77 I see you still don’t get it. But the principle remains unchanged. In your own pictures, the background DOES change, if you make the appropriate adjustments. The video quality is irrelevant here, it does not display a correct version of the actual picture.
@bbkingzor
Absolutely ! When you are explaining something to people, saying ” this is black” while you see white instead, and explaining why something is red while it is in fact blue, well how to say .. that means something got wrong. The videos by Adorama are in a sufficient good quality to observe that the result doesn t tally with the explanations.
@tourdumonde77 This guy has little idea to say that. lol
@tourdumonde77 Are you making this conclusion by what you see in the video? If so, you need to try it yourself before you judge it. I hope you can think your way to why this is.
@pjos111 Good point, lol .. maybe he’s on Auto ISO? It tends to always pick something higher rather than low.
@ksearles85 He already had a shutter speed of 1/3200 sec !
@pjos111 Allows faster shutter.
8:45 Unique? can you name a DSLR without flash exposure comp?
very helpful
@pjos111 YES ISO is set to 800. You need to when you start reducing Aperture down to F7, F8 and so on. You need to increase light sensitivity otherwise you need longer shutter speeds to get the same exposure and thats when you start introducing camera shake which blurs the photo.
8.30 What !!!
ISO at 800 ?
@hykugan in all apperture modes and shutter speeds.
I agree with tourdumonde77 – I think the subject and background are definitely changing together, despite the Mark’s description to the contrary. Jade is lovely, regardless.
Thanks for all the vids. I really like photography and learning to use a camera given to me some time ago (kodak p880). Its not that great and I want to purchase a new one. What would u recommend for someone like myself…I enjoy taking photos of landscape, architecture and nature. Thanks.. My budget is open.
I wanna marry her ! hot hot hot!
Detailed pretty great
These exposures can be done without flash ,just spot meter on the darkest area of subject ,lock the exposure ,compose and shoot ! you can test with F5.6 to F8 or for this much closeup ,I’d use F2.8 to F4 ,slight adjustments can be done changing EV and no matter what camera ,that’s a lot of ambient light to use ,why flash? IMO flash comes after the sunset
,i personally avoid flash as much as I can as there are always nasty glow spots left on the subject,then one needs diffusers and bouncers
@essellar Thanks! I’m doing real estate interior stuff lately and have been having a difficult time getting the proper balance. Been getting hotspots on the walls when I perform a flash bounce and navigating the flash w/ umbrella in the proper area so that it is out of the frame when taking the shot.
@tourdumonde77 The 2-stop overexposure was a bit much — with an ambient (no-flash) exposure, the model’s face would have been either properly exposed or somewhat overexposed. A flash cannot remove light, and the camera will make sure the model is properly exposed before the ambient light is fully recorded. Overexposing the background that way works fine if the subject is in deep shadow, but in softer light you’d need to lower the flash exposure by 1/3 to 1/2 of the amount you used. Always test.
@Champizfast A better dividing line is studio vs environmental photography (which can be outdoors or indoors). In a studio setting, the ambient light is something that keeps you from bumping into and tripping over things — the only light you usually want in the photo is the light you can control. As long as your settings are way underexposed for ambient light, you don’t care — you expose for the flash(es). With any environmental shooting, then yes, set an ambient first and add flash.
@skradaroman1 You’re not paying attention. He’s shooting in FP mode, high-speed sync, and probably needs a high ISO to compensate for the reduced flash power.
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Bjos
ownnn indicou a UNITED^^ OBRIGADA AMOOOOOOOOR *–*
@leessdful esta totalmente errada eles aceita sim então pesquisa por POISON HTML
A Comunidade não me aceita. :@
bom mano : )