Photography podcast #105 offers up tips on how to improve your bounced flash photography. Bouncing your flash off of walls and ceilings is easy and really softens the light which is often desirable especially in portraits. You can also achieve a much more interesting lighting pattern versus direct on-camera flash. You can often achieve great results with minimal effort and minimal help; I often use bounced flash when I am shooting alone and need a quick lighting setup.
The images below of my wife Carmy were shot in about 5 minutes against a slightly green wall in my livingroom. The tones in the face and background wall are similar but not identical in all images and I deliberately chose not to match them to see the subtle differences. These differences are due to the different ways that the light bounced around the room. There were windows in the room but the day was cloudy and no direct light was shining through the windows. Images are unretouched.
Links /resources mentioned in this podcast:
Spinrite - To recover crashed hard drives
Photo podcast #4 — Fill flash
Photo podcast #47 — Flash sync speeds
Photo podcast #71 Portable flash
- Bright Colour is our regular forum assignment for March
– Silhouettes is our level 2 forum assignment for March
If you liked this podcast and want to review it on Itunes, this link gets you to the main page
If you are interested in writing for our blog please contact me photography.ca ( A T ) G m ail Dot co m (using standard email formatting)
Please join the Photography.ca fan page on Facebook
My Facebook profile — Feel free to “friend” me — please just mention Photography.ca
My Twitter page — I will follow you if you follow me — Let’s connect — PLEASE email me and tell me who you are in case I don’t reciprocate because I think you are a spammer.
If you are still lurking on our forum,
feel free to join our friendly Photography forum
Thanks to Neil Speers, Stephen Kennedy, Ken Wolter, Jonathan Ramsdell and Allan Levene who posted blog comments about our last podcast. Thanks as always to everyone that sent comments by email about our last podcast. Although ALL comments are appreciated, commenting directly in this blog is preferred. Thanks as well to all the new members of the bulletin board. Most of the links to actual the products are affiliate links that help support this site. Thanks in advance if you purchase through those links.
If you are looking at this material on any other site except Photography.ca — Please hop on over to the Photography.ca blog and podcast and get this and other photography info directly from the source. |Subscribe with iTunes|Subscribe via RSS feed |Subscribe with Google Reader|Subscribe for free to the Photography podcast — Photography.ca and get all the posts/podcasts by Email
You can download this photography podcast directly by clicking the preceding link or listen to it almost immediately with the embedded player below.
Thanks for listening and keep on shooting!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Great info as always. Tnx Marko.
Very resourceful as usual, Marko. Thanks!
I’m curious.
What’s the source of the rim light on her right shoulder and right hip (Left of shot)?
On the direct flash it’s still showing as a source so it appears there was some other light going on.
Also on the direct flash shot (top left) there’s a fairly serious left/right nose split of the light, and much less on the tip. This would also suggest light from both sides, rather than direct.
I’m pretty sure you’ve got the images wrong for that one at least. I can see the hard shadow, but I’m not convinced it’s the only source of light.
Hi Robert,
Thanks for the comment and good eye! I mentioned in the podcast that there was some window light in the room that was less intense than the flash so that is what you are likely seeing as no other artificial light sources were used. Perhaps I should have explained that in more detail in the podcast, my apologies for any confusion. If more people are confused I’ll reclarify this in the next podcast.
Many thx!