sarangiman said:Etienne said:I get it that the D810 sensor is nifty.
But, why didn't you use a fill flash on that? It would have solved all of your problems, and you should probably have a flash on your camera at all times for outdoor portraits, especially weddings.
Were you just trying to rescue a bad error?
This is a legitimate question. Fill flash for outdoor portraits, pretty standard.
Huh? Who set that standard?
I had two 600EX-RT flashes on me and an emitter. I chose not to use it here (but used it later) b/c I didn't want unnatural lighting for this particular shot.
You do realize that fill & flashes create the sense of a separate light source that doesn't make that much sense when you have the sun behind your subjects, right?
That said, it can still create some cool & dramatic lighting, which I've used for environmental portraits.
I just didn't want it in this shot.
Why you're asking something so OT to my original point, is a better question.
Fill flash is a very, very common technique. Set properly, it adds very little light and doesn't create an unnatural look.
As I mentioned last year on this forum, Ansel Adams had a similar issue in his "Martha Porter, Pioneer Woman" portrait. Adams was a master of the technical aspects of photography, but for this portrait he didn't use a reflector or flash. Even so, he made a strong and memorable portrait by exposing for his subject (in shadow) and letting the highlights overexpose.
Upvote
0