Here's my lesson learned for today. I was taking portraits last night of people in front of a black backdrop. Same setup as I used before, but last time I used a grey backdrop.
I have a main softbox, a reflector, a hair light, and a backdrop light for the "halo" behind the subject. All strobes.
There I go with the incident flash meter balancing my lights. OK, main light is at f/8, reflector gives about f/5.6, so I'll put the hair light at f/8 as well.
So I set the lens at f/5.6. I am shooting Portra 160NC, so I don't worry about the highlights. I just want to make sure I don't lose shadow details.
Background light? Well, I'll give it f/8 in the brightest part, and f/5.6 in the darkest, creating thereby a pleasant gradation behind my subject.
Except that I was ... WRONG! My backdrop is black. Properly exposed black is black. That's the beauty of measuring incident light. When you don't compensate, you will usually get a tone that's pretty much correct.
To turn my black into grey-ish, I think I should have measured the brightest part of my halo somewhere around f/11 or f/16. I'll make sure to test it next time.
That makes me think: is there such a thing as a reflected light flash meter? It could come in handy...
I have a main softbox, a reflector, a hair light, and a backdrop light for the "halo" behind the subject. All strobes.
There I go with the incident flash meter balancing my lights. OK, main light is at f/8, reflector gives about f/5.6, so I'll put the hair light at f/8 as well.
So I set the lens at f/5.6. I am shooting Portra 160NC, so I don't worry about the highlights. I just want to make sure I don't lose shadow details.
Background light? Well, I'll give it f/8 in the brightest part, and f/5.6 in the darkest, creating thereby a pleasant gradation behind my subject.
Except that I was ... WRONG! My backdrop is black. Properly exposed black is black. That's the beauty of measuring incident light. When you don't compensate, you will usually get a tone that's pretty much correct.
To turn my black into grey-ish, I think I should have measured the brightest part of my halo somewhere around f/11 or f/16. I'll make sure to test it next time.
That makes me think: is there such a thing as a reflected light flash meter? It could come in handy...