Shooting an event with 60d...need advice

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Hello all,

I have been asked to shoot an event tonight, kind of a last minute thing. It's a cocktail party at a museum. My understanding is that they want pictures of the guests, atmosphere, etc. The event is indoors and the room has *decent* lighting. I'm told the photos will be used primarily for their Facebook page.

I'll be shooting with my 60d, and the lenses I have are the 50mm 1.4 and 28-135. I do not have an external flash.

I realize this is all kind of vague...but any advice? This is entirely on a volunteer basis, so I'm not all that nervous. And of course I'll do some minor post processing before I hand the images over.

Thanks!
 
bradfordswood said:
Hello all,

I have been asked to shoot an event tonight, kind of a last minute thing. It's a cocktail party at a museum. My understanding is that they want pictures of the guests, atmosphere, etc. The event is indoors and the room has *decent* lighting. I'm told the photos will be used primarily for their Facebook page.

I'll be shooting with my 60d, and the lenses I have are the 50mm 1.4 and 28-135. I do not have an external flash.

I realize this is all kind of vague...but any advice? This is entirely on a volunteer basis, so I'm not all that nervous. And of course I'll do some minor post processing before I hand the images over.

Thanks!

The 28-135 will probably not be fast enough and on my 7D, ISO 3200 is comfortable, ISO 6400 Im cringing, ISO 12800 is un-usable. That 50mm will quickly become your best friend but I'd recommend bounce flash if they don't mind. Then you could get away with your 28-135mm.
 
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Practise your standard portrait /group shot before you go, and set up a manual exposure which lets the ambient light in on the shot and use fill flash. Take an extra battery, spare cards, spare camera if u have one even a point n shoot. Consider taking a tripod and do some long exposures to get the feel of the movement at the event with a wider shot. Use the 50 for most shots you don't want to attract attention with and to capture the ambient feel of the event.
 
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