Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How to use flash to shoot dynamic portraits

How to use flash to shoot dynamic portraits

Use flash to shoot dynamic moving portraits. Booklets often appear in the same photos, such as the head of a leader photographed with a flash in a gloomy sky. In fact, it is also very effective to shoot sports portraits with flash. When shooting athletes with remote synchronous flash, the exposure should be controlled in the underexposed state, so that people in the foreground can stand out from the deeper background. TomMartin, an expert in news and sports photography, said, "The stronger the flash, the better the photos will look. Using single-sided lighting will make your photos more brilliant, but at a close enough distance, using the camera's built-in flash or on-board flash will also get a similar effect, but you need to manually adjust the output. " Shooting tips: Before turning on the flash, make an accurate manual exposure of the whole picture at the required shutter speed, and then reduce the 2-stop aperture. When using a camera without a flash, you need a remote auxiliary flash cable or a wireless remote control to trigger the external flash. You can use flash exposure compensation to adjust the output of the flash, but to take the same photos as below, you'd better set the flash to manual mode. Editor: Wen Li