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no_surrender wrote:
Chuck, once again thanks for the description, how-to, and sample images! Since only 2/3 of the flashguns I have are Canon Speedlites, I'm going to start practicing with just a fill and key light. I'd like to see what the difference is between shooting a scene (whether indoors or outdoors) with only ambient vs one Speedlite mounted in camera hot-shoe vs one Speedlite off-camera vs the two light A:B ratio.
Kevin
These are range tests I did in HHS mode but they show ambient only, one flash and two flashes outdoors:
When I test I usually start with a baseline ambient shot for comparison, exposed per the playback clipping warning to keep the highlights below clipping:
http://super.nova.org/MP/HSS/_MG_5034.jpg
A scene indoors or out either matches the 7-8 stop range of detail of the sensor or not. A backlit scene is 10 of more stops so choosing to expose for the highlights results in overall loss of shadow detail. Also everything darker than white gets reproduced darker than "normal" in the photo.
What defines "normal"? For me it is what I PERCEIVE in person in the same lighting. It differs from what the camera records because what it sees at a fixed aperture and shutter speed, whiile the eyes constantly change exposure digging more detail out the the shadows when focusing on them. The brain proceesses what the eyes see to the overall perception of the scene lighting.
When you look at a photo like the one above your reaction is likely that it doesn't look "normal". Ask yourself why. YMMV but for me what is normal looking or not is base on: 1) what I think is most important in the scene, and 2) how I expect it to look. In a photo, especially one assisted with flash the expectation would be that the foreground content, which is usually the most important, is exposed "normally" as seen by eye after the eyes adapted to the light level in the shadows. I could have opted to expose the front of card normally by opening the lens 2-3 stops, but that would have blown the highlights and make the later flash assisted shots seem less normal.
In the next shot I've added a single flash, a 580ex mounted over the camera on my Stroboframe bracket. I used 1/1 power for the test and kept moving closer until as best I could judge from the playback the foreground looked "normally" exposed — a subjective decsion not a technical measurement based on eyedropper readings.
http://super.nova.org/MP/HSS/_MG_5026.jpg
As with the ambient only shot the overall exposure with shutter/aperture was based on keeping the sunny highlights below clipping. What happens when a single flash is added from near the axis is that the exposure on the front side can be lifted separately because of the chose of ambient light angle and the fact the flash doesn't overlap the sunny highlights significantly. So the closer I got with the flash at 1/1 power the more "normal" the foreground became EXPOSURE-WISE. But note that at the same time the flash was correcting the shadow--side exposure it has eliminated the skylight modeling seen in the ambient only shot.
There several important concepts to grasp here with respect to using single flash.
1) The ambient light is not "flat". Natural skylight has direction from above and at other than midday from the side because the sky is brighter overhead that at ground level. Skylight has both a 'key' modeling direction and an omni-directional 'fill' component that work to modell objects seen in open shade and backlight on the shaded side.
2) Near-axis flash is flat, regardless of whether it is used indoors or outdoors.
3) Near-axis flash, added to natural skylight will overpower it and cancel it's natural downward modeling.
So what single flash near-axis does is solve one problem by normalizing exposure on the shaded side, but creates a new one; killing the natural 3D modeling of the skylight. Moving the single flash off axis on a stand would result in normal looking highlights on front where the flash hit, but in the shadows the flash does not hit would remain as dark as in the ambient -only shot. That might work for some situations but not for others, but most significantly the photographer has no INDEPENDENT CONTROL over the highlight:shadow ratio on the face.
Indoors with single flash off axis is no different. To the extent there is any fill in the shadows the flash doesn't hit directly with it's light rays the fill is coming from the ambient room light and "spill flill" bounce off the ceiling and walls. The shadows will be lighter in a small room than a big one because therre is more "spill fill". But there is no independent control of the lighting ratio. That's the advantage of using two flashes.
Here in the third part of my test I used two flashes, both direct 580ex in HSS mode with the off camera flash at a 45° angle to the right and about 45° higher as I might light a full face view of a person from the side.
http://super.nova.org/MP/HSS/_MG_5035.jpg
Here the first goal was to visually set overall exposure per the sunny highlights from the back rim lighting. Next, because the flash on the bracket was now acting as fill, I moved it until I could see visual separation in the shadows in the playback. I was not seeking specific eyedropper values on the target because I have no way to measure them when shooting. When shooting I'm "flying" VFR (visual flight rules) based on what I see in the playback. When I moved in to 10' I saw sufficient separation in the darker tones of the foreground.
You might note that that with the single flash I would up at 7' but here with two flashes I was at 10'. That's because now the flash on the camera is being set based on shadow detail on the front side, not normal looking highlights. If it were a portrait subject like a bride and groom in backlight I'd base the fill power on the details in the dark clothing.
I don't have a shot to illustrate this, but if you were to see a shot of just the background exposed for the sunny highlights, and the near-axis fill adjusted for the shadow detail without the "key" light you'd see "normal" looking shadow detail (i.e. the laces on the grooms shoes and buttons on the black coat) but the front of the white highlights would look flat and gray because the single flash is canceling the modeling of the skylight as in the single flash shot, and not strong enough to expose the highlights.
The "trick" to making portrait lighting and lighting overall seem NATURAL is to understand and duplicate the angles of natural light. That's why my off camera flash in the test was placed at 45° above and 45° to the right of the target, to mimic the natural modeling of the skylight the near-axis flash cancelled. Since I was using the two flashes at 1/1 power in M mode getting "normal" looking highlights on the front side was just a matter of moving the off camera light closer at the 45/45 angle until the balance between the sunny highlights from the back and the flash created highlights on the front looked "right" which is to say how I'd expect to see them by eye — normal balance of rim / key / fill.
Again for me the balance is a subjective decision based on many factors, including how much of the background is seen in the shot. Here's the same shot as above in a tighter crop:
http://super.nova.org/MP/HSS/_MG_5035_Cropped.jpg
To my eye it seems more "normal" than the wide shot. Thinking about why that's the case I concluded that when comparing the wide and tight shots the underexposed background of the wide shot was influencing my perception of the foreground. In the tighter crop there is no background context to influence my brain's decision about what in the photo looks "normal" or not.
Your brain and mileage may vary but that's how I've come to approach the use of flash outdoors.
First I determine whether or not the scene without flash will fit the sensor. On a cloudy or overcast day I wouldn't use flash the same way as this test, or at all, because it wouldn't be necessary.
If scene exceeds sensor the next question is whether or not I can find something interesting to put in the foreground within the range of the flash. If so I will put the sun to the back of the foreground subject using the sun as rim light, and then light the front of the foreground with the flash. If not I'll compose the shot in a way that the content which is in shade and falls beyond the sensor isn't significant or noticed by putting the sun at my back and the scene in light that casts the shadows down behind things.
If shooting full face views I find I can get acceptable results with a single flash on bracket because I shoot with a bracket because it creates natural downward modeling and hides the shadows the flash creates down behind the subject. The shadow on the sides of the face wind up dark, but that works to frame the face and make it look slimmer. That's true of flash on a bracket indoors or out which is why in the 40 years I've been using flash mine has rarely ever been in the hot shoe of the camera.
I'll add a second flash indoors or outdoors when I want to control the lighting ratio on the subject. For example for this outdoor shot...
http://super.nova.org/MP/ButterflyCanonExample.jpg
I put the sun behind the subject and shot from high on a ladder to surround the her with the grass of the front yard where I shot it. In that situation the flash on the bracket above the camera became the frontal key light, with the slave placed lower in front of the ladder I was shooting from about chin level with her...
http://super.nova.org/MP/ButterflyCanon2.jpg
Had I only used the one flash on the bracket I wouldn't have gotten the shadow details seen in the uniform or her shoes, which she wanted to be seen in the shot.
Here's a series of single and dual flash shots I took when friends dropped by with their daughter. I had the camera and bracketed flash handy so I grabbed two quick single flash shots:
http://super.nova.org/MP/AlexHK1.jpg
I put her in the white chair intentionally to create a white background the same distance to the flash, knowing the angle of the light on the bracket would hide most of the shadows. But you can seen the shadows with are visible are quite dark and unflattering. Seeing she was cooperative I ran downstairs and grabbed the slave on the stand, flipped the switch on the 580ex on the bracket to Master, and set ETTL ratio to 1:1 because I wanted lighter than "normal" shadows.
http://super.nova.org/MP/AlexHK4.jpg
http://super.nova.org/MP/AlexHK5.jpg
This one was shot the same as those above, but I tweeked the middle slider in Levels to make the shadows a bit darker and shifted the color balance cooler to reflect her change in attitude:
http://super.nova.org/MP/AlexHK3.jpg
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