Posts Tagged ‘camera’

Existing-Light Portraits

By now you’ve probably noticed one of the great ironies in good portrait photography: you should turn the flash on when working outdoors. So guess what the great secret is for indoor portraits? That’s right turn the flash off. Some of the most artistic portraits use no more than an open window and a simple reflector.

The problem with using your on-camera flash indoors is that the light is hard and creates a very high contrast image. “Harsh” and “contrast y” are not two words subjects like to hear when describing the pictures you’ve just taken of them.

Fill flash works outdoors because everything is bright. The flash “fills” right in. But ambient light is much dimmer indoors, and the burst of light from the flash is much like a car approaching on a dark street.
Of course there are times when you have no choice but to use your camera’s flash indoors. It’s very convenient, and gives you recognizable pictures. But when you have the time to set up an artistic portrait in a window-lit room, try using existing light only.

First, position your subject near an open window and look at the overall scene. You should not relay only on visual perception only, because your eyes and brain are going to read the lighting a little differently than the camera will, especially in the shadow areas—you will see detail in the dark areas that the camera can’t record.

This is why you need a reflector to “bounce” some light into the shadow areas. Many photographers swear by collapsible light discs
, but a large piece of white cardboard or foam core will work just as well.

Place your reflector opposite the window and use it to “bounce” the light on to the dark side of the model. This will help “fill in” the shadow area so you can see some detail.

Now put your camera on a tripod and slowly squeeze the shutter button. Check the image on the camera monitor.

If the shadow area is too dark, you may want to add another reflector. If the overall image is too dark, turn on exposure compensation, set it to +1, and try another picture. If the color balance of the image is too “cool” (that is, bluish), then you may want to adjust White Balance and see if that improves the rendering.

Remind your model to sit very still during exposure because you may be using a shutter speed that’s as slow as 1/15th of a second, or even longer.

You could increase the camera’s light-sensitivity by adjusting the ISO speed to 200, but don’t go beyond that because you’ll degrade the image quality too much for this type of shot.

Once you’ve toyed with these variables, go back to the artistic side of taking pictures and work on the composition. Try to get all the elements in the picture working together and let nature’s light take it from there. When it all comes together, existing light portraits are magical.


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Posted by last-d    Date: Sunday, November 22, 2009

Categories: How To? Tips And Tricks

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