Flash Tips
By The Editors September, 2004
Electronic flash is a versatile photographic
tool. From tiny units built into cameras to multi-head studio flash systems
with separate power supplies, electronic flash is popular with photographers
from snapshooter through pro.
Here are a few handy tips to help you get better photos with flash.
1. Fill-Flash
The most popular use for flash is to fill (lighten) harsh shadows in sunlit
outdoor portraits. Most cameras with built-in flash units offer both auto-flash
and fill-flash modes. In auto-flash, the flash unit automatically fires when
needed (i.e., in dim lighting). In fill-flash mode the flash will fire for every
shot, regardless of light level. This is the mode to use to fill-in those harsh
shadows in sunlit portraits (in auto-flash mode, the flash probably won’t
fire due the the bright ambient light level).
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The
TTL (through-the-lens) flash exposure control available with many
AF 35mm and digital SLRs (here, Nikon’s D100) makes fill-flash
simple and accurate. Photo By Ron Leach
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Many SLR cameras offer flash exposure
compensation, which allows you to adjust the degree of flash fill. If your camera
offers this feature, experiment with it to see how much fill works best in the
situations you normally encounter. With sunlit portraits, it’s generally
best for the flash to be one stop less intense than the ambient light. For backlit
subjects, it’s generally best for the flash to balance the ambient light.
Fill-flash also adds attractive catchlights to subjects’ eyes. One caution:
While fill-flash will soften the harsh shadows produced by direct sunlight,
it won’t prevent your subjects from squinting due to the bright light.
2. Key-Flash
You can make the flash the main light source (key light) by adjusting things
so the output from the flash is more intense than the ambient light. This is
a great way to get rich blue skies in flash photos, or to play-down a distracting
background by darkening it. If your camera offers flash exposure compensation,
just dial-in +1. If it doesn’t, dial-in –1 stop of exposure compensation
for the ambient light, using the camera’s normal exposure-compensation
feature. Or you can do it manually: Determine the exposure for the ambient light
in manual mode, then close the lens down one stop from that exposure. Then,
with the flash in manual mode, select the power setting that will produce correct
flash exposure at the set aperture. In the resulting photo, the flash-lit nearby
subject will be properly exposed, while the ambient-lit background and sky will
be underexposed by one stop.
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To
get this rich blue sky, the photographer dialed-in –1 stop
of ambient-light exposure compensation, and the camera-flash system
automatically did the rest. The Fujifilm GA645i camera used to
make this shot has a leaf shutter, which syncs with electronic
flash at all shutter speeds, making the technique easier. With
focal-plane shutters (found in most SLRs), it’s best to
use slow films (or low ISO settings with digital SLRs)—at
ISO 400, the basic daylight exposure would be 1¼400 at
f/16, and if your camera’s maximum flash-sync shutter speed
is 1¼125, and your lens only stops down to f/22, you won’t
be able to use key-flash (which would require an aperture between
f/32 and f/45 for one stop of underexposure at a shutter speed
of 1¼125 at ISO 400). Photo by Ron Leach
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3. Red-Eye
Anyone who’s shot flash photos of people or animals has seen “red-eye,”
those horrible red spots in the eyes. (With animals, the spots can be other
colors, such as yellow or green). Red-eye occurs because the light source (flash
unit) is too close to the lens axis: the light goes straight into the eye, and
is reflected off the retina right back to the film or image sensor. The only
way to eliminate red-eye is to move the flash unit off-camera, away from the
lens axis. Obviously you can’t do this with built-in flash units, so camera
manufacturers generally provide a red-eye-reduction mode that reduces (but doesn’t
eliminate) red-eye by causing the flash unit to fire several times at low power
before the shot is taken, to “stop-down” the subject’s eyes
and thus lessen the effect.
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Red-eye
is a bit unpredictable—note the doggie has it while the
person doesn’t. Photo by Renee Chodor
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There is a drawback to red-eye reduction
systems: They cause a noticeable delay between the moment you press the shutter
button to make the exposure, and the moment the exposure is actually made. If
precise timing is important to a shot, do not use red-eye reduction mode; rather,
retouch the red-eye afterward, either via a red-eye pen on the print, or digitally
(many consumer-level image-editing programs have red-eye-removal features, or
you can do it manually).