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“The
New World of Wireless Flash”, © By Dan Richards,
PopPhoto.com, February 2005
When Joe McNally wanted to do this firehouse shot using
three flash heads, he didn’t have to worry about extension
cords or bulky location battery packs. He took his
Lighting kit out of his gadget bag, thanks to Wireless TTL
flash: three Nikon SB-800 flashes, a couple of lightweight
stands, and two folding diffusers.
One of today’s outstanding photography tools still scares
many photographers—for no good reason. It’s great for
everything from portraits to party pictures, for Lighting
up a dark room or filling shadows in bright daylight.
In many ways, Wireless is easier than wired studio flash:
you’re not working with cumbersome power packs or hefty
monolight heads. You can vary Lighting ratios from a
single master unit, and have the flash system figure
exposures automatically.
You may already have one piece of a starter kit. You’ll
need one master dedicated flash unit that’s the “big
flash”: the Canon Speedlite 580EX, the Nikon SB-800
Speedlight, etc. And you’ll need at least one other unit
that works with the master. You can get another big unit
but a smaller satellite unit like the Canon 420EX or Nikon
SB-600 costs less. You should have three flash units, but
you can do plenty with two.
Some Wireless pointers: Know your units: While working
with Wireless flash is easy, the control sequences of
these flashes can be daunting. (And in general,
manufacturers make these things nonintuitive, even
cryptic.) You’ll need to spend some time curled up with
your flash instruction manual going through the settings.
Think in EV: If your flash unit can be set in EV units,
it’s less confusing than using flash ratios—number pairs
like 1:2 or 1:4. One EV equals a stop of light. Dead-on
exposure is 0.0 EV flash compensation. Mild fill is about
–1.7 EV. Some units, though, use only ratio.
Think manual: For the camera, that is. While it’s OK to
use P (for program) or A (for aperture-priority) mode,
manual exposure on the camera combined with TTL auto for
the flash gives you lots of control, and isn’t really any
more difficult. You can vary apertures for depth-of-field
control (see the caution, next page) and/or use the
shutter speed to increase or decrease the ambient light in
the picture. Remember, varying the shutter speed has no
effect on the flash exposure.
Be properly dedicated: Plenty of flash units of various
brands provide TTL automation connected to the camera. For
Wireless TTL, you need a unit with the specific circuitry
to send and receive exposure signals.
Pay attention to power: Even big TTL flashes are still no
match for big studio units. And bouncing the light eats up
even more output. Pay attention to flash-OK signals, and
check your preview images or histograms in digital capture
so you’re not underexposing. Be especially careful when
using small apertures, and open up the lens if need
be. Don’t flash into the lens: Some cool setups call for
putting flash units behind your subjects, or Lighting from
the side. Make sure the flash illumination doesn’t spill
into the lens, or it will flummox the exposures.
Play, play, play! Sure, you’ll make a few mistakes, but
remember there are a lot more right answers than wrong
ones. Vary the output of different units and see what
happens. Reposition them to bounce off a different wall.
Use the zoom head to widen or narrow the beam angle. Have
fun—that’s an order!
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