08-13-2015 12:00 PM - edited 08-13-2015 12:01 PM
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08-14-2015 11:15 AM
For outdoors in "sun", I'd use a flash. The difference in the sunlit vs. shadow parts of your subjects will be extreme in full mid-day sun, but using flash ("fill flash") while outdoors is a great way to improve the look of a shot.
Switch to "Program" mode on the mode dial.
Raise the pop-up flash (the small button near the mode dial with the lightning bolt symbol release the catch-hook and raises the flash.)
Note that when you look through the viewfinder to take a photo, there is some information displayed along the bottom... most of which is exposure information. But on the far left side you will see a small lightning-bolt icon. If you see that icon illuminated, it means the camera will use flash when you take the shot.
In the basic modes you have little control over when the camera will use flash (it's automatic), but in the "creative zone" modes (Program, Tv, Av, and M) you have full control and can force the camera to use flash. HOWEVER, using "Program" mode is the same as using the full auto mode (the green box) *except* that you can override several things that you can not override when using full auto.
It would be much better if you had an external speedlite (e.g. like the Canon 430EX II) because the built-in pop-up flash is very limited (subjects need to be close for that flash to have much effect).
When I shoot outdoors (I'm also shooting a wedding tomorrow), I set a feature called "Flash Exposure Compensation" to "-1". You can find instructions on this on page 102 of your instruction manual (not the "basic instruction manual"... the full version of hte instruction manual for your camera.) "Flash Exposure Compensations" asks the camera to determine how much flash power it needs (which is what it normally does) but then adjust the amount of power either upward or downward based on the "compensation" level that you set. The reason I dial it down is that I do not want my photos to have the look people commonly associate with flash photography... I still want the sun to be the main source of light... and I only want the flash to fill in the deep shadows (you'lll still have shadows... but they'll be weak shadows instead of strong shadows.) This improves the lighting.
When you go inside, you will want to turn "flash exposure compensation" feature off by setting it back to "0" (zero means don't alter the amount of flash -- do whatever the camera wants to do.)
08-13-2015 01:56 PM
08-13-2015 01:57 PM
08-14-2015 11:15 AM
For outdoors in "sun", I'd use a flash. The difference in the sunlit vs. shadow parts of your subjects will be extreme in full mid-day sun, but using flash ("fill flash") while outdoors is a great way to improve the look of a shot.
Switch to "Program" mode on the mode dial.
Raise the pop-up flash (the small button near the mode dial with the lightning bolt symbol release the catch-hook and raises the flash.)
Note that when you look through the viewfinder to take a photo, there is some information displayed along the bottom... most of which is exposure information. But on the far left side you will see a small lightning-bolt icon. If you see that icon illuminated, it means the camera will use flash when you take the shot.
In the basic modes you have little control over when the camera will use flash (it's automatic), but in the "creative zone" modes (Program, Tv, Av, and M) you have full control and can force the camera to use flash. HOWEVER, using "Program" mode is the same as using the full auto mode (the green box) *except* that you can override several things that you can not override when using full auto.
It would be much better if you had an external speedlite (e.g. like the Canon 430EX II) because the built-in pop-up flash is very limited (subjects need to be close for that flash to have much effect).
When I shoot outdoors (I'm also shooting a wedding tomorrow), I set a feature called "Flash Exposure Compensation" to "-1". You can find instructions on this on page 102 of your instruction manual (not the "basic instruction manual"... the full version of hte instruction manual for your camera.) "Flash Exposure Compensations" asks the camera to determine how much flash power it needs (which is what it normally does) but then adjust the amount of power either upward or downward based on the "compensation" level that you set. The reason I dial it down is that I do not want my photos to have the look people commonly associate with flash photography... I still want the sun to be the main source of light... and I only want the flash to fill in the deep shadows (you'lll still have shadows... but they'll be weak shadows instead of strong shadows.) This improves the lighting.
When you go inside, you will want to turn "flash exposure compensation" feature off by setting it back to "0" (zero means don't alter the amount of flash -- do whatever the camera wants to do.)
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