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mikec
15-07-2009, 4:54pm
Hey guys,

Looking some some quick and dirty tips for an event I need to cover next week. It's a local thing and I'm basically donating my time and using it as a learning experience plus I'm getting special access for some posistions for different angles etc...

Anyway I checked out the lighting on Monday night and it's terrible. I was getting about 1/3 sec at f3.5, ISO1600 which is way to slow since the event is an indoor climbing event. So I figured a faster lens still wouldn't cut it so a flash was my only choice.

I'm hiring a 430EX II for the night (trying to accomplise this on a budget) and I'm after a few pointers.

I'm going to bounce / difuse the flash as much as I can with a home made bounce card or diffuser. There isn't much opportunity to bounce the flash off anything else.

I'll be shooting manual, around 1/200th sec or faster with F stop and ISO to what they need to get sharp results.

Anything I should look out for or try?

Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.

Cheers,
Mike.

PS. Yes I know it'd be better to do a trial with the flash the night before but it's not an option at the moment, damn shoe string budget.

pollen
15-07-2009, 6:26pm
If it's like those typical high ceiling rock climbing type events, you'll be wasting your time with flash, better to get a f/1.4 or f/1.2 lens, that way you'll get a shutter around the 1/30 region and if you take it up to ISO 3200 you'll get at least 1/60 shutter, though it'll be a bit noisy.

With home made bounce cards/diffusers, unless you are drastically increasing the surface area of the light source, they will be not much different than just direct flash (if you can't bounce). The further away from your subject, the crapper the results will look when using flash.

Unfortunately your best bet is probably natural light unless you can bounce the flash off a wall though if I could I would probably bounce off a wall (and ditch the diffusers). At times the subject might be a bit too far away though. Flash is horrible as the subject distance increases though

mikec
15-07-2009, 8:13pm
Unfortunately I can't push up to ISO 3200. I don't think 1/30th is going to cut it either, I'll get lots of blurry climbers! The event is at night in a poorly light industrial shed, more or less.

I might be able to bounce the flash off the climbing wall but it's a light purple / grey colour which probably won't lend itself well to bouncing I'd imagine. Can colour cast from bouncing be corrected in PP with WB?

Any one else have any thoughts?

swifty
17-07-2009, 11:19pm
Wow.. that's some tricky lighting situation.
I'm trying to figure out where most of your stand point would be. I doubt you'd be dangling on a harness on the same level as the climbers so from below you're throwing light potentially an awful long way.
And you say there's not much opportunity to bounce either...

FWIW this is probably what I'd do.
-ISO: take it up as high as you/your cam is comfortable shooting. If results are only used as small web sized presentations, you can push it quite high.
-If all the competition is taking place around one wall, you have the advantage of knowing which wall you might be able to utilise for bouncing. Try to colour balance manually but I'd still shoot RAW to be safe. I would still avoid direct flash if possible.
-Open up aperture as large as you can. Here you gotta be careful to see how fast your cam will sync at. With fast syncing I believe you start to sacrifice your flash output ie. guide number goes down.
- Put your flash in rear curtain flash mode.
- Experiment with slower shutter speeds with rear curtain flash to increase ambient light - this introduce slight motion blur whilst the flash freezes the end position.

That's about all I can think of for now.

jev
17-07-2009, 11:52pm
-Open up aperture as large as you can. Here you gotta be careful to see how fast your cam will sync at.
Aperture has nothing to do with how fast your camera will sync. Keep shutter speed at 1/30 or so and try to balance the light.


- Put your flash in rear curtain flash mode.
That is useless with slow-moving objects like climbers (unless they fall down :D ). Better use first curtain so that you maximize the chance to have an okay position of the climber during the flash.

My advice would be:
- camera in manual
- shutter speed somewhere around 1/30 or so (depends a bit on how close you can get to the climbers - if you need a long telelens without IS, you might need to speed things up a bit!)
- aperture f/5.6 or so, depends mostly on required DOF. Don't go much larger or you'll end up with only half-sharp subjects.
- ISO as high as possible (mind the noise; if your camera is okay up to 800 ISO thna don't put it much higher!)
- bounce the flash if you can and if the flash can provide the power. If not, try to balance the ambient light as good as you can against the flash output and try to minimize shadows falling on backgrounds.

Jimbo
18-07-2009, 7:36am
Your question reminded me of this Strobist.com article (http://strobist.blogspot.com/2007/01/on-assignment-lighting-large-interior.html). His ideas may help you...

ricktas
18-07-2009, 8:43am
Moved this from NTP to Flash forum

Jimbo
18-07-2009, 2:23pm
After further thought, if you're on a budget then the article I linked to above may not be much use - it involves 2 speedlights, off-camera with radio triggers.

swifty
18-07-2009, 6:10pm
Aperture has nothing to do with how fast your camera will sync. Keep shutter speed at 1/30 or so and try to balance the light.


You are, of course absolutely right in that aperture doesn't affect flash sync. Sorry I should've elaborated further. What I meant to say is that in chasing high shutter speeds, the OP may be using high iso and opening up aperture so the shutter speed may exceeds the flash sync speed (or manually setting high Shutter speeds), typically around 1/200 or 1/250th for many DSLRs. And in doing so, you have to use high speed flash sync which reduces the flash's guide number.


That is useless with slow-moving objects like climbers (unless they fall down :D ). Better use first curtain so that you maximize the chance to have an okay position of the climber during the flash.

My advice would be:
- camera in manual
- shutter speed somewhere around 1/30 or so (depends a bit on how close you can get to the climbers - if you need a long telelens without IS, you might need to speed things up a bit!)
- aperture f/5.6 or so, depends mostly on required DOF. Don't go much larger or you'll end up with only half-sharp subjects.
- ISO as high as possible (mind the noise; if your camera is okay up to 800 ISO thna don't put it much higher!)
- bounce the flash if you can and if the flash can provide the power. If not, try to balance the ambient light as good as you can against the flash output and try to minimize shadows falling on backgrounds.

Again I'm no authority on rock-climbing but from my limited experience, climbers are often in longer periods where they don't move much (where slower shutter speeds should be fine), followed by short bursts of quick maneuvering for tricky lunges and overhangs. I would think some of the better action shots can be obtained during these peak action and perhaps 1/30 may not be enough.
My comment on rear curtain also refers to artistic use of motion blur during these peak action. Generally their movements are more predictable than eg. erratically moving ball sports players so peak action can be anticipated and timed with slow rear curtain sync.
DOF of course is also not just a function of aperture so without knowing what lens and what distance the OP is shooting at its hard to know the appropriate aperture. But it seems in this scenario where light is the limiting factor, if the shot is tightly framed its unlikely you'd need a lot of DOF. And if its a wide shot showing climber and wall, then DOF shouldn't be a huge issue so I'd take the extra stop of aperture where possible.
Cheers

swifty
18-07-2009, 6:12pm
After further thought, if you're on a budget then the article I linked to above may not be much use - it involves 2 speedlights, off-camera with radio triggers.

Thanks for link though, Jimbo. Even if the OP can't do it now, it is good reference for later as off-camera strobes open up a whole new window of opportunity for the types of shot you can get.

Darey
18-07-2009, 7:20pm
Mike,
Given the distances you will need to cover and lack of light I would suggest you Hire, Borrow or buy a decent f2.8 70 - 200mm lens and a good quality external Flash.

Do not diffuse the flash, you want maximum power. :th3:
Set ISO at 800
Camera on Manual mode 1/200sec at f2.8

This will give you the light and speed you will need.

Following is a quick Test Shot (no critique required I know its crap ) which shows the light power of a Nikon SB800 when taking a shot in almost total darkness at 24 meters.
(I had to try manual focus due to lack of light and the car is black) :)

Most good quality external flash will give you this light power. If you are shooting at distances greater than 25M I would suggest you use a flash beamer.

mikec
19-07-2009, 8:39pm
Thanks for all the info guys!

A few guys have mentioned 1/30th and while if the climber was stationary it'd be fine but seeing as how I'm wanting to get action shots as another has mentioned I'll have to take it up to the sync speed.

DOF shouldn't be a concern at the distances I'll be shooting from either and my lenses probably aren't going to allow me to get really shallow DOF anyway.

Thanks for the link to strobist too! I actually thought about picking up some ebay triggers but I'm not going to have enough time to be comfortable and confident using them so I ruled it out for now. It will be on my shopping list later on though ;)

Thanks for all the help guys! Fingers crossed, I'll post up the results after the shoot.

Cheers,
Mike.

jschokman
19-07-2009, 10:49pm
I must disagree with not using multi flash and just a fast lens. Here is a climbing shot i took a couple of weeks ago, one of a series. I used a 70 -200 2.8 and two remote flashes, one behind climber and one from camera left side. Both flashes were clamped to holds with manfrotto nano clamps and were a good 6 metres from the climber.The only issue is getting the lights in the right places.

mikec
20-07-2009, 8:13am
Nice shot! Remote / multi flash work is definately something I want to get into because I think it can produce some fantastic results.

ehor
20-07-2009, 10:09am
If you're going to hire a 430 EXII then why not go the whole hog and hire 2 x 580's and 3 x Pocket Wizards?

Probably want some light stands/nano clamps too. :th3:

mikec
20-07-2009, 10:13am
If you're going to hire a 430 EXII then why not go the whole hog and hire 2 x 580's and 3 x Pocket Wizards?

Probably want some light stands/nano clamps too. :th3:


What to sponser me? :)

Trying to do it on a budget at this stage since I'm trying to save up for my next lens purchase. Parents are going to New York in October so I've got a shopping list for them for B&H :D

Empire
20-07-2009, 3:49pm
Can you hire a 580exII instead ? You might find the extra grunt useful.

bmxbandit
07-09-2009, 12:22am
How did the shoot go? What did you end up doing?

There are a few things that you could (for next time), depending on what the images are for.
There is the, I-have-nothing-to-lose mode where you set the shutter to what you think you need, open up the aperture, set the ISO to whatever, and shoot in RAW. In post, make the images black and white, and slide up that exposure and brightness control. Then, if the image is not too bad, you can use some noise controlling techniques to fix things up.
Here is an example of a picture that I have rescued.

The original
http://scotthone.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/20090115-_mg_7403-2.jpg

Moving those exposure and brightness sliders
http://scotthone.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/20090115-_mg_7403.jpg

And reducing the noise as per this post on my blog (http://scotthone.com/blog/2009/01/19/thank-goodness-for-raw/)
http://scotthone.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/20090115-_mg_7403-edit.jpg

Option 2, see if you can borrow a camera that has good ISO/noise ratio. So you can shoot at ISO 6400 with no qualms.

Option 3, borrow an SB-26 or something that has an optical slave on it, and shove it over the side somewhere. Then you have your direct flash, and another light source coming from somewhere else.

Refining this a little, you can have two strobes off to the side triggered via optical slaves, and use your camera's pop-up flash to fire them.
I had to do this once when I stupidly left my transmitter at home. (Turned out that I just didn't look hard enough in my bag!)
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3327/3240442193_9da61bbe38.jpg

Hope this helps for next time.

bmxbandit
12-04-2010, 9:19am
... For next time, a more details explanation to option 3 -- care of strobist (http://strobist.blogspot.com/2010/04/on-assignment-earth-treks-pt-1.html).

kiwi
12-04-2010, 9:50am
did we get across the concept that the flash freezes the action, not the shutter speed ?

mikec
12-04-2010, 10:28am
Wow talk about digging up an old thread....

I think I've come a fair way since I posted this thread now. I'm using a 580EX II these days off camera with a set of PW's. Haven't had a chance to use them in this type of situation again but I think I'd be right now that I'm getting the hang of balancing ambient with flash.

bmxbandit
17-04-2010, 11:02pm
Cool.

beckett5361
28-04-2010, 12:15pm
Glad I'm not dealing with that under pressure, strobist has quite a few rock wall shots on it, they all seem to light the wall from behind objects, either climbers or equipment on the ground, good luck with it. Love the photo recovery and noise reduction information too thanks, I'll try that out.