Using Automatic Flash
Automatic electronic flash is so convenient and easy to use that you are
usually unaware it even fires. With your camera on automatic, it’s always
ready when your autoexposure system decides it’s needed. But this on-camera
flash lighting has certain characteristics that can make a difference in the
way your pictures look. For example, the pictures will have a "flat"
lighting typical of flash-on-camera shooting. Alternative approaches, such
as positioning a separate flash off camera (or using a slave unit) may
produce more interesting results. In any event, you will be able to use
flash to better advantage as you become more familiar with its
characteristics and the various forms available.
Many digital cameras have a variety of flash modes that we’ll explore in
this chapter. Although they go by different names, these modes typically
include Auto that fires the flash whenever the light is too dim to take a
photo, Anytime Flash that fires the flash regardless of how much available
light there is, Red-eye Reduction that fires a separate lamp to reduce
red-eye when taking portraits, Flash Cancel that turns the flash off so you
can photograph with available light without the flash firing, and Slow
Synchronized that keeps the shutter open longer than usual to lighten the
background.
Flash photography has come a long way since the 19th century when a
photographer had to ignite a tray filled with gunpowder to illuminate a
scene. Almost every digital camera comes with a small built-in automatic
flash that is tied into the autoexposure system. These flash units are
convenient; however their range is very short; normally around 10 feet or
so. They are also so close to the lens, photos of people often capture them
with red eyes. They emit a hard, direct light and can’t be rotated to bounce
flash off a wall or ceiling to soften it.
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Flash on camera
is convenient to use: every place you and your camera go, the flash goes
with you. All flash-on-camera photos look very much the same—a flat,
relatively shadowless light that minimizes surface textures and volumes.
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To overcome these limitations, a variety of external flash units are
made. These units work like those on 35mm SLRs. They either slip into a "hot
shoe" on the digital camera that both holds them and connects them to the
camera shutter release and autoexposure system, or they are mounted on
brackets and connected to the camera by a synch cord, basically a small
cable. This synch (pronounced "sink") cord makes the same electrical
connection that the hot shoe does but lets you position the flash off
camera.
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A flash that
rotates and swivels lets you bounce flash off walls and ceilings for
softer light and more interesting effects. |
Another way to use external flash is to buy a slave flash unit that fires
automatically when it senses the burst of flash from the camera’s built-in
flash unit. Since many digital cameras fire the flash twice for each picture
(the first is a pre-flash to set colour balance), these units have to be
adjustable so they fire when the camera’s second flash goes off. These units
are more powerful than the on-camera flash and also allow you to rotate the
head to use bounce flash to soften shadows.
Every flash has a maximum useful range. How bright the light from a flash
is when it reaches a subject depends on the flash’s power and on how far the
light has to travel. The further the subject is from the flash, the less
light will reach it and so the less light will be reflected from the subject
back toward the camera.
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Flash light
falls off (becomes dimmer) the farther it travels. Objects near the
flash will be lighter in a picture than objects farther away. You can
use this to advantage; for example, at night you can isolate a subject
against a dark background. |
When the flash fires, the beam of light expands as it moves father from
the camera. As a result, subjects nearer the flash will be illuminated with
a more intense light than subjects farther away. The rate at which the light
falls off is described by the inverse square law. If the distance between
the flash and subject is doubled, only one quarter the amount of light will
reach the subject because the same amount of light is spread over a larger
area. Conversely, when the distance is halved, four times as much light
falls on a given area.
When subjects in an image are located at different distances from the
camera, the exposure will only be correct for those at one distance—normally
those closest to the camera or in the middle of the area metered by the
autoexposure system. Subjects located farther from the flash will be
increasingly darker the farther they are from the flash.
How To: Using Auto Flash
Auto mode is usually the default settings. Look in your camera manual
for a section on auto flash. |
Flash is a good source of light when you want to make portraits,
particularly of children. The light from the flash is so fast that you never
have to worry about your subject moving during the exposure and blurring the
picture. For the same reason you don’t have to be quite as careful about
camera motion blurring the image; you can hand-hold the camera and shoot as
rapidly as the flash will recharge.
Positioning the flash and subjects
You may want to choose carefully the position of the flash. Light from a
flash built-into the camera often produces less attractive results than if
you bounce the light onto the subject off a wall, ceiling, or umbrella
reflector.
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When
photographing more than one subject, each is given the same importance
when lined up parallel to the camera because each receives the same
amount of flash illumination. If they are at different distances from
the flash, they will be illuminated differently. This is a good way to
make one more visually dominant than others in the image. |
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When a subject
is placed close to a wall, there will almost always be a distracting
shadow in the image cast by the light from the flash. By moving the
subject away from a wall, these shadows disappear. |
Red-eye
When photographing people, you’ll often see images with what’s called
"red eye." The light from a flash has entered through the subject’s pupil
and reflected off the back of the eye (the retina) and back out to the
camera. Since the retina is full of thin blood vessels, it takes on a red
colour. To eliminate red-eye, many cameras have a "red-eye reduction" mode.
This mode works by firing a short pre-flash lamp or a burst of flashes to
close the subject’s iris a moment before the actual flash fires to take the
picture.
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Here a champion
figure skater displays the classic "red eyes." |
To minimize red eye, you can also move an external flash farther away
from the axis of the camera lens, tell the subject not to look directly at
the camera, or increase the overall room lighting. You can also remove
red-eye later using software included with the camera, but it’s easier to
avoid it to begin with.
How To: Combating red-eye
Look in your camera manual for a section on red-eye
or red-eye reduction. |
When photographing people or other subjects in bright sun, shadow areas
can be so dark in the image that they show little or no detail. If the
shadow covers a large part of the subject, the effect can be distracting and
unattractive. You can lighten such shadows by using flash to "fill" the
shadows to lighten them. In this mode the flash fires even when there is
enough available light to take the picture.
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With no fill
flash (left) the bright background has underexposed the main subjects.
Using fill flash (right), the people now stand out from the background. |
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Fill flash
eliminates dark shadows in a backlit shot. Photo courtesy of Cathy
Morin. |
How To: Using Fill Flash
Look in your camera manual for a section on fill,
forced on, or any time flash. |
Often, pictures taken with flash show a well exposed foreground subject
against a black or dark background. The slow synchronized mode is designed
to minimize this problem by leaving the shutter open longer than usual to
lighten the background.
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A slow shutter
speed and flash combined to create this photo showing both sharpness and
blur. |
In many cases, the slow shutter speed used in this mode allows blur from
rapidly moving objects or camera shake to appear as blur in the images. To
avoid blur, use a tripod and photograph static subjects. Or, use this effect
creatively. A short flash burst combined with a long shutter speed gives
interesting effects. The flash freezes objects sharply, and then the dim
ambient light blurs the image slightly and moving lights appear as streaks.
How To: Using Slow Sync
Look in your camera manual for a section on slow synchronized
flash. When the flash is set to slow sync, long exposure times
may create unwanted blur in the image. At times like this, you may want
to use a camera support. |
There are times when the light is dim but you want to capture the unique
colours of the available light. In these circumstances you need to turn the
flash off and support the camera for a long exposure. If you don’t turn off
the flash it will fire and the foreground subjects will appear as if
photographed in daylight. If you don’t support the camera you will likely
have blur from camera movement.
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Available light
can add beautiful colours to a photograph. |
When the flash is off, long exposure times may create blur in the image.
At times like this, you may want to use a camera support.
How To: Turning off the Flash
Look in your camera manual for a section on forced off
or off flash. |
When photographing in dim light there are things you can do to get better
results when not using flash. Try the following:
- Increase the camera’s sensitivity.
- Use the camera’s self-timer or remote control.
- Support the camera or use a tripod.
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