Indoor Photography

12 years 7 months ago #153173 by Kirsty1975
What's the best way to shoot indoor photography inside a church hall. The lighting is horrendous so means I need to use my flash. The last time I turned the flash down and the shots were ok but had to edit them to brighten them up and still got red eye. I have tried using 6x4 photopaper in front of the flash in the house to bounce the flash in the house but would it work the same way in such a big room with high ceilings? Are there other tips to try?

Thanks, much appreciated.

Kirsty


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12 years 7 months ago #153177 by chasrich
Depending on the composition you could be shooting anything from portraits to indoor landscape. Can you show us an example of the shots you want? I'm also thinking that poor lighting can be combated with a tripod and remote shutter release. :woohoo:

“Amateurs worry about equipment, professionals worry about money, masters worry about light, I just make pictures… ” ~ Vernon Trent
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12 years 7 months ago - 12 years 7 months ago #153180 by MLKstudios
Follow these steps:

1. Set ISO to 400
2. Set exposure mode to M
3. Set shutter speed to 1/60 (or less)
4. Set aperture to f/4.0
5. Set flash to TTL

If your flash allows you to bounce, do that. Off walls, ceilings or anything else available.

Adjust the shutter speed (lower) if you get a cave look. A slower shutter speed mixes more ambient with the flash.

Matthew :)

eta Check that the flash EV is set to 0.0. Sometimes called FEC (Flash Exposure Compensation).

Matthew L Kees
MLK Studios Photography School
www.MLKstudios.com
[email protected]
"Every artist, was once an amateur"

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12 years 7 months ago #153201 by Kirsty1975
I can't really add a photo as there's lots of kids in it. I had my iso at 1600 so I could use a shutter speed of 1/60 but couldn't really use a higher shutter for sharper images and the kids move about a lot. I didn't use my tripod either as I felt it would be useless since I couldn't use a slow shutter speed to catch the kids or images would just be blurred or am I just a rubbish photographer? The edits aren't actually that bad but I want better.

Just looked at my flash settings and at E-TTL II /i have evaluative or average.
I also have 1st Curtain and 2nd Curtain.


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12 years 7 months ago - 12 years 7 months ago #153204 by MLKstudios
1st curtain and evaluative will make a good flash exposure for most subjects.

Practice bouncing the flash and twiddling the FEC up and down -- for more and less flash exposure.

:)

Matthew L Kees
MLK Studios Photography School
www.MLKstudios.com
[email protected]
"Every artist, was once an amateur"

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12 years 7 months ago #153205 by Kirsty1975
Here is a shot I took last week, usually there's be kids around the table. This is unedited. Looked at my exif details and nothing is mentioned under flash. The rest of the details apart from the iso being at 1600 are the same as MLKstudios mentioned.


Attachments:
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12 years 7 months ago - 12 years 7 months ago #153207 by MLKstudios
Bouncing off the ceiling will even the light and avoid light fall off -- the front being brighter than the back.

:)

Matthew L Kees
MLK Studios Photography School
www.MLKstudios.com
[email protected]
"Every artist, was once an amateur"

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12 years 7 months ago #153208 by Kirsty1975
Thanks, that's the settings the camera is at. I've actually never read my manual, just played about with it. I've had the camera for about a year now and I have noticed a difference to what I was like but indoor shots are really annoying me and I hate going in to places not knowing what I'm doing, lol.


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12 years 7 months ago #153209 by Kirsty1975
I'll give that a go. I only have my onboard flash at mo but used a piece of photopaper in the house so will try that in the hall next time and see how it looks.


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12 years 7 months ago - 12 years 7 months ago #153210 by MLKstudios
Welcome.

Also, you can adjust the f/stop to f/8 if you want more in focus (ex. when shooting more than one kid, or when you want the table sharp front to back). It controls your Depth of Field (DoF).

Don't use f/8 at a distance though, unless you have plenty of batteries. ;)

Matthew L Kees
MLK Studios Photography School
www.MLKstudios.com
[email protected]
"Every artist, was once an amateur"

The following user(s) said Thank You: Kirsty1975
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12 years 7 months ago #153216 by Kirsty1975
Thanks for that. Will give that a go too. I did struggle a bit to get focus. :)


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12 years 7 months ago #153676 by bcap fish

Kirsty1975 wrote: What's the best way to shoot indoor photography inside a church hall. The lighting is horrendous so means I need to use my flash. The last time I turned the flash down and the shots were ok but had to edit them to brighten them up and still got red eye. I have tried using 6x4 photopaper in front of the flash in the house to bounce the flash in the house but would it work the same way in such a big room with high ceilings? Are there other tips to try?

Thanks, much appreciated.

Kirsty


You could try without the flash, but you would have to use a tripod and a fast lens


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