Hi folks,
First off, can I please make it clear that I completely understand how to balance ambient and flash, I'm not looking for a basic explanation!
Traditionally, I always shot with manual ISO and would shoot in Manual mode when using a flash. I'd dial the shutter speed up to the indicated setting, snap a shot with the flash turned off, dial the shutter speed up or down if I didn't like the ambient, then I'd turn the flash on and pop another shot. I'd then dial the flash up or down using the buttons on the flash, till I liked the subject:ambient ratio. Easy enough.
What frustrates me now though, is that I started using my D700 with Auto-ISO on. I love it - saves me having to faff on ramping the ISO up all the time, and I trust the high ISO performance enough that if it wants to shoot at 4000 then so be it.
However! This doesn't work well when you have a flash on.
Basically, as far as I can see, the only way to shoot with a flash and balance subject:ambient is to turn off auto ISO and revert to M mode.
One would THINK that the exposure compensation changes the ambient (ie shutter speed up/down), and the flash compensation would change the subject. But no? It seems like exposure compensation changes both? And flash compensation adds to exposure compensation?
Par example... If you dial in exposure compensation -1, and flash compensation +1, you end up with the same as if you hadn't touched either of them... Pointless. Why does exposure compensation affect the flash?
I think if I want to do +1 on the flash and -0.5 on the ambient, I can do exposure -0.5 and flash +1.5, but I'm not sure, because the results seem unpredictable, and I end up just going to M and turning off Auto-ISO.
And if you try to shoot in M mode with Auto-ISO on, then any changes you make to shutter speed to lighten/darken the ambient are immediately counteracted by AutoISO which ramps the ISO up or down to undo your changes!
This isn't the end of the world but it does bug me that I have to spend 4 seconds turning off Auto-ISO and switching to M mode, then 4 seconds turning it back on and going back to A mode, every time I want to flash someone.
Anybody know of a better way?
Shoot with a D700 and SB600, btw.
Cheers,
Rich
First off, can I please make it clear that I completely understand how to balance ambient and flash, I'm not looking for a basic explanation!
Traditionally, I always shot with manual ISO and would shoot in Manual mode when using a flash. I'd dial the shutter speed up to the indicated setting, snap a shot with the flash turned off, dial the shutter speed up or down if I didn't like the ambient, then I'd turn the flash on and pop another shot. I'd then dial the flash up or down using the buttons on the flash, till I liked the subject:ambient ratio. Easy enough.
What frustrates me now though, is that I started using my D700 with Auto-ISO on. I love it - saves me having to faff on ramping the ISO up all the time, and I trust the high ISO performance enough that if it wants to shoot at 4000 then so be it.
However! This doesn't work well when you have a flash on.
Basically, as far as I can see, the only way to shoot with a flash and balance subject:ambient is to turn off auto ISO and revert to M mode.
One would THINK that the exposure compensation changes the ambient (ie shutter speed up/down), and the flash compensation would change the subject. But no? It seems like exposure compensation changes both? And flash compensation adds to exposure compensation?
Par example... If you dial in exposure compensation -1, and flash compensation +1, you end up with the same as if you hadn't touched either of them... Pointless. Why does exposure compensation affect the flash?
I think if I want to do +1 on the flash and -0.5 on the ambient, I can do exposure -0.5 and flash +1.5, but I'm not sure, because the results seem unpredictable, and I end up just going to M and turning off Auto-ISO.
And if you try to shoot in M mode with Auto-ISO on, then any changes you make to shutter speed to lighten/darken the ambient are immediately counteracted by AutoISO which ramps the ISO up or down to undo your changes!
This isn't the end of the world but it does bug me that I have to spend 4 seconds turning off Auto-ISO and switching to M mode, then 4 seconds turning it back on and going back to A mode, every time I want to flash someone.
Anybody know of a better way?
Shoot with a D700 and SB600, btw.
Cheers,
Rich
Everybody raves about how good Nikon's auto flash system is.