smorter wrote in post #5708315
Is there a way to avoid this when taking the photo?
I was thinking maybe fill flash or something to overpower the ambient
This isn't my skill area (portraits), but I've been reading lots so hopefully I've picked up some good tips along the way. If anyone wants to correct me please feel free to do so. I'd like to learn too
....
I think the common wisdom is to keep the sun off the front of your subjects altogether, at least if it is very bright and strong. Sunrise and sunset will be different. Bright sun shining into their faces will make them squint. Bright sunlight above them will cast strong shadows into eye sockets, under noses and chins, and anything else that sticks out! As you have found, bright sidelighting creates hot spots (ditto overhead sun).
Your choices are....
- Place the sun behind them and use a reflector or flash to provide fill;
- Place them in a shaded spot (even shade, not dappled) and use your flash to provide a catchlight in the eyes and pop them from the background, just a little. I think open shade is the term we're looking for - in the shadow side of a wall/building, for example. Shade in a forest would work too, so long as you have even lighting on your subjects and not dappled sunlight dancing through the leaves. Go off camera with your flash, to the side, in order to create more depth in their features;
- Hope for kinder weather - light cloud makes a wonderful natural softbox;
- Shoot at sunset or sunrise, when the sun is battling through the atmoshpere and is softer, warmer, and less direct. A reflector may be an advantage.
- Take some seriously powerful flash gear so you can dominate ambient light completely and light your subject almost entirely with flash alone. I don't think a pop up flash would really cut it. You may also find your background vanishing, which may or may not be what you want.
- Have the sun facing towards them, from the side a little, but use a large diffuser to soften the light and remove the harsh shadows and squinting. A big white sheet held by a couple of assistants, or a clothes line, should do it. Effectively you'll be creating your own "open shade" and at the same time adding soft side lighting to enhance features in a flattering way.