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Vital Tips on Flash Photography According to Photo Marketing Association International
A digital camera's built-in flash unit is a useful tool for better photographs. However, photographers should learn when to use flash, and when not to. If you have been relying only upon the camera's automatic flash function, here are few things to know, according to Photo Marketing Association International (Jackson, MI), the trade association for the photo imaging industry.
First, read the camera instruction book and learn how to turn off the flash,
and how to employ the "force flash" function (that means making the camera's
flash operate in bright light). Usually, both functions are displayed on LCD
menus as "lightening bolt" (force flash) and lightening in a circle crossed with
a line (off).
Sometimes flash will ruin a picture if a photo is being made through glass,
such as photographing a painting under glass in a museum, or taking a photo
through a bus window. Most times it would be better to make a longer exposure
without flash, if you can steady the camera or use a tripod.
If you want to take a moody, atmospheric photo in fog or at dusk, turn the
flash off to retain the look of the fading evening light. Often these pictorial
effects are quite beautiful, particularly at or just after sunset.
Remember that most built-in flash units have a very short effective range,
usually a maximum of from 8 feet to 15 feet. That means subjects farther away
will be badly underexposed. One way to get around this shortcoming is to
purchase a stronger auxiliary flash unit that can be attached to the camera.
Frequently more expensive cameras have a "hot shoe" flash contact at the top of
the camera so that a supplementary flash unit can be attached -- camera
manufacturers often offer special integrated flash units.
Flash can be used in bright sunlight to eliminate shadows on subjects' faces.
This technique is called "fill-flash" (since it "fills" in the shadows) and
requires the force-flash setting. Fill-flash can not only be used when subjects
are in the shade, but also in bright sunlight when people squint. Here you place
the subjects with their backs to the sun and employ fill-flash for their faces.
If you get it just right, the sun becomes a back light halo for the subjects'
hair.
Some cameras have a night photography flash setting (usually a symbol of moon
and stars, plus a flash -- check your instruction book). With this setting, the
camera takes a long exposure of the night scene (you may need a tripod) plus a
flash exposure. The idea is to have a person in the foreground of the scene
illuminated by the flash (and who also will stand still for the ongoing long
exposure). For example, you can take a night flash photo of your wife with the
illuminated Eiffel Tower behind her for a memorable picture of Paris.
The same setting can be used creatively by slightly jiggling the camera
immediately after the flash. Since the flash freezes a sharp image, moving the
camera during the long exposure makes the night lights dance around your
subject.
Photo Marketing Association International Tom Crawford, 517-788-8100
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