dmward wrote in post #15978694
How far was the flash from the subject?
HSS dramatically reduces working distance. At the shutter speed you shot at, with a low ISO a 430EX would probably have to be within 5 or 6 feet. As an aside, give some thought to light placement. The shadow from her nose is not good. Light should be higher and, for this type shot maybe even closer to lens axis.
well for this shot, the flash was about 2-3 feet from the subject, and slightly angled above her pointing straight towards her and flash angled as a strip for to provide more lighting for most of the body...
pyrojim wrote in post #15979202
I'd consider trying a two light approach for this sort of shot. But do everything you can to soften the light. Bare bulb/head at close range is NOT pretty.
As for the model.... Her bra is crooked, her hair is no bueno, the pose is boring...
Try and get a logo-less bra, and think of an awesome way to show off her lines, her body.
What that looks like I have NO idea.
thank you, but I know this, my only equipment with HSS is 1 HSS speedlight, if I use modifiers I am required to use more power, and more speedlights... I've been also playing with garyfong modifier to see if this has any or much effect to soften the shadows... right now I am only trying to master the ability to do HSS photography proficiently. The bikini, was her own modeling name, she wanted to "show it off," at that time I didn't care anything more than to test myself to become as proficient as possible in HSS.
SkipD wrote in post #15979228
Chris, your Speedlite was in the worst possible location for the shot. Look at the shadow of her nose (left side of her face). That was caused by the flash.
If you're going to turn the camera to the "portrait" position, you need to do something to get the flash above the lens rather than out to the side. There are several solutions. One is a flash bracket that keeps the flash above the lens. Another would be to aim the flash at a reflector (probably held by an assistant) and bounce the flash back toward the subject at the proper angle to get pleasing shadows.
I'm sorry, but please don't critique the photo, I am asking on understanding HSS, not lighting portraits... My only focus of this shoot was to get the background light and subject light evenly exposed... and understanding HSS better, and have yet to understand that as I attempt to expose for background I dont got enough power from the 430 EX II, which sounds like I will need an upgrade speedlight to 580 or 600 EX speedlight to achieve what I am trying.
As for the flash above the lens, I doubt will work when I am 10-15 feet away with a 70-200, at 200mm. I know harsh shadows are mostly bad on females... that isn't about this topic please.