Thursday, April 1, 2010

Trial and Error


Last weekend I tried a couple of techniques to manipulate the image while taking the picture.

The first one is called 'rear-curtain sync.' What you do here is to pop the flash at the end of the exposure time, rather then in the beginning of it. This way, you capture the movement with the ambient light, but finish the exposure with a flash, which freezes the motion.



It isn't perfect for a few reasons:

1)  In every good photographer's opinion, a picture should tell a story. This doesn't.
2) The background did not fully catch the motion. I should have dragged the shutter further.

Well, deal with it. It's only a try.

I am more satisfied with the result of the second one. I saw this fisherman in a cold afternoon, but the sun was still up and harsh. Here's the first picture I took with sun light only. It is rather a dull and flat image.


Then, however, I pushed the white balance to 'fluorescent' to make the background cooler. Then gelled an SB600 with CTO to give a warm sunset feel and pointed it from camera left to the subject. The flash was only gelled. No modifiers used and it was in full power, zoomed up to 85mm. 

Here's the result: