Used SB800 for first time and gave it a real workout
Posted: Sat Apr 02, 2005 3:26 pm
I had the opportunity to photograph some girls in a bikini competition. The event had a photographer but through a contact I was allowed to also cover it. This is the first time I have ever tried to photograph such an event.
Hard work but someone has to do it.
I took about half the shots in about a 3m by 3m room with 10 contestants, 3 make up and hair people, another photographer and everyones bags and equipment. Needless to say it was hard to get clear shots amid the chaos of girls getting ready. There was also a time pressure as the girls had to get changed and photographed between each catwalk session. Pretty hectic stuff.
There was formal wear, casual wear and of course bikinis.
The other half of my shots were taken out by the catwalk. A rope kept the crowd back and gave me and the other photographer a bit of room to move around.
I took about 370 keepable images on the night in about 3 hours. I started shooting RAW but when I had filled one of my two 1GB cards up after the formal wear I changed to Jpeg so I would have enough space to record the whole event.
Anyway every shot was with flash and the SB800 performed well. I had only got it from Birdy the night before (thanks a bunch Birdy for getting it to me so quickly) and only had time to read the manual at work and take 10mins worth of test shots before the show.
I pretty much went through all the batteries, the eight I got from Birdy plus four I all ready had.
I'd say about 95% of my shots were pretty well exposed and I am pretty happy with that given I have never used a flash other than a built in one and have very little flash photography experience.
I used the diffuser dome for all shots and generally had about +1/3 flash compensation set.
My biggest mistake was trying to take two images quickly. Sometimes the flash hadn't cycled to ready yet and resulted in a dark image. I noticed this was more likely to happen when the batteries were getting closer to depletion.
On the D70 I used flash WB most of the night and for a time I left it on Auto WB. I went through one and a half D70 batteries.
What did I learn from the night?
- The WB on the D70 was great under the circumstances. I hardly needed to touch WB in Nikon Capture. I did tweak the exposure on some shots but overall I didn't need to use RAW for WB reasons.
- The autofocus on the D70 with the kit lens impressed me in conjunction with the flash. There were many times I wish it locked on a bit quicker but I think I had only two shots that I deleted because they weren't focused.
- If I continue to shoot RAW I need more than two 1GB CF cards for events like that.
- I need a few more batteries for the flash so I can use the 5th battery for faster cycle time.
- The importance of the histogram and LCD screen to judge exposure, here I was with new equipment and a newbie at flash photography and using this digital camera technology as a tool was still able to get a good result. I would have no immediate feedback with a film camera and probably would have screwed most of the exposures not knowing if what I was doing was okay.
- I love taking pictures of good looking women.
Sorry for the length of this post but I was excited about the night and wanted to share my observations.
I have placed some of my images in a post in the Image Review forum.
Cheers
Hard work but someone has to do it.
I took about half the shots in about a 3m by 3m room with 10 contestants, 3 make up and hair people, another photographer and everyones bags and equipment. Needless to say it was hard to get clear shots amid the chaos of girls getting ready. There was also a time pressure as the girls had to get changed and photographed between each catwalk session. Pretty hectic stuff.
There was formal wear, casual wear and of course bikinis.
The other half of my shots were taken out by the catwalk. A rope kept the crowd back and gave me and the other photographer a bit of room to move around.
I took about 370 keepable images on the night in about 3 hours. I started shooting RAW but when I had filled one of my two 1GB cards up after the formal wear I changed to Jpeg so I would have enough space to record the whole event.
Anyway every shot was with flash and the SB800 performed well. I had only got it from Birdy the night before (thanks a bunch Birdy for getting it to me so quickly) and only had time to read the manual at work and take 10mins worth of test shots before the show.
I pretty much went through all the batteries, the eight I got from Birdy plus four I all ready had.
I'd say about 95% of my shots were pretty well exposed and I am pretty happy with that given I have never used a flash other than a built in one and have very little flash photography experience.
I used the diffuser dome for all shots and generally had about +1/3 flash compensation set.
My biggest mistake was trying to take two images quickly. Sometimes the flash hadn't cycled to ready yet and resulted in a dark image. I noticed this was more likely to happen when the batteries were getting closer to depletion.
On the D70 I used flash WB most of the night and for a time I left it on Auto WB. I went through one and a half D70 batteries.
What did I learn from the night?
- The WB on the D70 was great under the circumstances. I hardly needed to touch WB in Nikon Capture. I did tweak the exposure on some shots but overall I didn't need to use RAW for WB reasons.
- The autofocus on the D70 with the kit lens impressed me in conjunction with the flash. There were many times I wish it locked on a bit quicker but I think I had only two shots that I deleted because they weren't focused.
- If I continue to shoot RAW I need more than two 1GB CF cards for events like that.
- I need a few more batteries for the flash so I can use the 5th battery for faster cycle time.
- The importance of the histogram and LCD screen to judge exposure, here I was with new equipment and a newbie at flash photography and using this digital camera technology as a tool was still able to get a good result. I would have no immediate feedback with a film camera and probably would have screwed most of the exposures not knowing if what I was doing was okay.
- I love taking pictures of good looking women.
Sorry for the length of this post but I was excited about the night and wanted to share my observations.
I have placed some of my images in a post in the Image Review forum.
Cheers