Friday 10 August 2018

flash - Group shots on a bright sunny day?


What are some techniques for getting good group pictures (3-8 people, say) on a bright sunny day?


I've found shade to be difficult, because someone will invariably have a splash of harsh sun across their face… But I haven't had the opportunity to experiment with multiple off-camera flashes yet. Does that help?


Edit: Thanks for the suggestions. One of the issues I was thinking of, which I should have mentioned more explicitly, is harsh shadows (eg, on people's eyes, on their nose).



Answer




The easiest is if you have the sun behind you, but not exactly behind you, but at an angle. That will give a slight side light to the faces, and they don't have to squint so much because of the sun.


If you use a flash in daylight, it's mostly to push away shadows, so that is useful if you have the sun from the side or behind the subject. The direction isn't very critical as it mostly affects the shadows, so a camera mounted flash works.


If you happen to have a big light wall close by that is in sunlight, you could use that as a giant reflector. Be a bit careful about the color though, something just off-white with a yellow tone would be ideal to match the warm sunlight and counter the slight blueish tone in the shadows.


There is not really the same need to use multiple lights outside as in a studio, you usually have a lot of secondary light bounding around, so not even the shadows are very dark.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Why is the front element of a telephoto lens larger than a wide angle lens?

A wide angle lens has a wide angle of view, therefore it would make sense that the front of the lens would also be wide. A telephoto lens ha...