evilonion
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- Messages
- 802
- Name
- Dave Peacock
- Edit My Images
- Yes
i feel like a complete tool for asking such a simple question but say you have a person sitting in a car, i want a shot of that person to be well exposed but also outside the car well exposed.
door is open, im drivers side shooting person in passenger side...
spot metering blows out the background, and other options make the inside of the car too dark.
is it a case of having to blend 2 exposures or can this be done?
using flash resulted in far too much shadow, or would you just use the flash on manual with a slight bit of fill?
I thought this shot would be easy but all my efforts have come out pretty rubbish to be honest.
some example of various shots. brides, models etc
http://www.ichauffeur.co.uk/a/i/rolls-royce-wedding-car-bride-gl.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ambermodels/6316907694/
As im writting this im starting to think maybe a low setting on manual flash as a slight fill with a diffuser of some sort. but i dont want to end up blowing highlights if the camera is metering the whole scene.
door is open, im drivers side shooting person in passenger side...
spot metering blows out the background, and other options make the inside of the car too dark.
is it a case of having to blend 2 exposures or can this be done?
using flash resulted in far too much shadow, or would you just use the flash on manual with a slight bit of fill?
I thought this shot would be easy but all my efforts have come out pretty rubbish to be honest.
some example of various shots. brides, models etc
http://www.ichauffeur.co.uk/a/i/rolls-royce-wedding-car-bride-gl.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ambermodels/6316907694/
As im writting this im starting to think maybe a low setting on manual flash as a slight fill with a diffuser of some sort. but i dont want to end up blowing highlights if the camera is metering the whole scene.