csedgbeer
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 237
- Name
- Chris
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Hi
I'm starting to do event photography and I mainly shoot in Av and use fill in flash from a 550ex which works well. But i'm never sure how to use flash "properly" when the light is too low for Av on it's own without silly high ISO.
Example, was out the other day covering a student protest march, it was a grey overcast morning, and using f4 (biggest i've got on my 17-85) unless I went up to ISO 1600 i was only getting a shutter speed of 1/30 or slower which seeing as i was walking wasn't fast enough.
So I put the camera on P and let it sort itself out, most of the shots where then 1/50 or faster which still wasn't quite enough on some shots when i was zoomed into around 80mm. The flash was in e-ttl so it was figuring itself out.
I guess manual mode is what I need for shots like that, is there a general rule or is it a case of experimenting and checking the histogram to see if the photo is correctly exposed?
I'm also out doing some photography at the Sunseeker Rallye in Bournemouth next month, and in the evening at the finish podium which will be in the dark the same question applys. I know going to P works well ish, but I feel i should be doing it the proper way really!
thanks
Chris
I'm starting to do event photography and I mainly shoot in Av and use fill in flash from a 550ex which works well. But i'm never sure how to use flash "properly" when the light is too low for Av on it's own without silly high ISO.
Example, was out the other day covering a student protest march, it was a grey overcast morning, and using f4 (biggest i've got on my 17-85) unless I went up to ISO 1600 i was only getting a shutter speed of 1/30 or slower which seeing as i was walking wasn't fast enough.
So I put the camera on P and let it sort itself out, most of the shots where then 1/50 or faster which still wasn't quite enough on some shots when i was zoomed into around 80mm. The flash was in e-ttl so it was figuring itself out.
I guess manual mode is what I need for shots like that, is there a general rule or is it a case of experimenting and checking the histogram to see if the photo is correctly exposed?
I'm also out doing some photography at the Sunseeker Rallye in Bournemouth next month, and in the evening at the finish podium which will be in the dark the same question applys. I know going to P works well ish, but I feel i should be doing it the proper way really!
thanks
Chris