Find what you are looking for

or search by

Topics

Article
Article

Article

e-Book
e-Book

e-Book

Video
Video

Video

Campaigns
Campaigns

Campaigns

Architecture
Compact Cameras

Compact Cameras

Architecture
DSLRs

DSLRs

Architecture
Videography

Videography

Architecture
Astrophotography

Astrophotography

Architecture
Mirrorless Cameras

Mirrorless Cameras

Architecture
Architecture Photography

Architecture Photography

Architecture
Canon Technologies

Canon Technologies

Architecture
Low Light Photography

Low Light Photography

Architecture
Photographer Interviews

Photographer Interviews

Architecture
Landscape Photography

Landscape Photography

Architecture
Macro Photography

Macro Photography

Architecture
Sports Photography

Sports Photography

Architecture
Travel Photography

Travel Photography

Architecture
Underwater Photography

Underwater Photography

Architecture
Photography Concepts & Application

Photography Concepts & Application

Architecture
Street Photography

Street Photography

Architecture
Full-Frame Mirrorless Cameras

Full-Frame Mirrorless Cameras

Architecture
Lenses & Accessories

Lenses & Accessories

Architecture
Nature & Wildlife Photography

Nature & Wildlife Photography

Architecture
Portrait Photography

Portrait Photography

Architecture
Night Photography

Night Photography

Architecture
Pet Photography

Pet Photography

Architecture
Printing Solutions

Printing Solutions

Architecture
Product Reviews

Product Reviews

Architecture
Wedding Photography

Wedding Photography

Tips & Tutorials >> All Tips & Tutorials In Focus: The Basics of External Flash Photography- Part4

[Part 1] Capturing a subject standing against the sun with daytime sync

2014-03-20
6
16.84 k
In this article:

Daytime sync is a technique of firing the flash under the sun with the sunlight as the main source, and the flash as an assist light. Use it when you want to avoid the subject from appearing dark in a backlit scene, or when you want to reproduce the color of the subject in a vivid tone by illuminating light on a cloudy day. In [Part 1], I will explain the basic steps for and effects of shooting using daytime sync. (Reported by: Koji Ueda)

Brighten the subject even when the sun is in the background

In a shot with the sun included in the background, stopping down the lens aperture allows you to capture the shape of the sun in the image. This example was taken in the Aperture-priority AE mode at an aperture setting of f/22. Here, I selected E-TTL as the flash mode for the camera to determine the amount of light to emit automatically. For a composition with a huge light source such as the sun at the back of the subject, it goes without saying that the front view of the subject would be shadowed, thus turning out dark. To resolve this issue, I fired the flash from the front to brighten the subject, while capturing the silhouette of the sun at the same time.

EOS 60D/ EF-S10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM/ Aperture-priority AE (f/22, 1/125 sec.)/ ISO 100/ Exposure compensation: -1EV/ WB: Daylight/ Flash: SPEEDLITE 580EX II (E-TTL)

Tips

  • Stop down the aperture to capture the color of the sky and the shape of the sun
  • Fire flash from the front to bright the subject

Shooting Condition

Position of the subject, camera and Speedlite

A: Approx. 1.5m

On this cloudless, sunny day, I picked a composition with the sun appearing in the background of the subject. However, doing so causes the front view of the subject to be shadowed and appear pitch-dark in the resulting photo. To overcome this problem, I adjusted the angle of the emitter, and fired the flash on the upper body of the subject to brighten her. Also, I tweaked the brightness of the background by compensating the exposure to -1EV.

Steps for Daytime Sync

1: Determine the brightness of the background

Determine the exposure according to the brightness of the background. Using the manual exposure mode allows you to set the exposure as desired.

2: Adjust the flash

Adjust the angle of the flash emitter so that light is illuminated from the front of the subject.

3: Take a test shot

Take a test shot while firing the flash. Check the balance in brightness between the background and the subject.

4: Perform flash exposure compensation

Adjust the flash output accordingly. Adjust the camera exposure again upon checking the test shot image.

Koji Ueda

Born in Hiroshima in 1982, Ueda started his career as an assistant for photographer Shinichi Hanawa. He later became a freelance photographer, and is now engaged in a wide range of work from magazines to commercials while shooting different cities and landscapes all around the world. He is also a writer and a lecturer at photography lectures and workshops.

Share your photos on My Canon Story & stand a chance to be featured on our social media platforms