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Just got me a flash

430 EXII.

This is really the beginning for me, that's it. I've never really shot with flash, but if there are things to read, that would be great. I'm not doing anything studio or crazy. Just some casual shooting with the flash on camera.

All I know is to 90 degree bounce for now especially if im shooting in typical indoor places with regular height ceilings. Dunno what to expect with trickier situations though....
 
Just play with it, try things out. Bounce off different stuff, try a piece of paper in the flash head to direct a bit of light on the subject while bouncing. Try cheap reflectors. Practice on still objects first so you don't wear the patience of sentient beings.
 
that's the one I am planning on getting but it's tough spending $250 - $300 on a flash alone.
 
I actually just sold my 430EX lol. Turns out my 20+ year old manual flashes have all of the same features for off-camera work, which is how I do a lot of my flash shots now. In the meantime I got a cheap ($60) Sigma EF500 DG ST to serve E-TTL duty for on-camera bounce flash.
 
430 EXII.

This is really the beginning for me, that's it. I've never really shot with flash, but if there are things to read, that would be great. I'm not doing anything studio or crazy. Just some casual shooting with the flash on camera.

All I know is to 90 degree bounce for now especially if im shooting in typical indoor places with regular height ceilings. Dunno what to expect with trickier situations though....

Excellent...It's a great flash. Few things for you.
1. You can bounce off anything, just remember: the color of the surface matters, lol.
2. You can indeed get pro quality shots with on camera flash, but you won't get them right away.
3. The Gary Fong lightspheres and other stuff like that are not worth buying, don't do it...instead...go to photography on the net forums and look for "better bounce card". You need to throw some light forward, but just a little--to get a little fill and to give catch lights in the eyes.
4. I use black velcro (looks great) and have a small square (same width as flash) piece of white light-diffusing material (with a piece of velcro on it) from an old Gretag Masterlab minilab printer as my "bounce card"--it basically glows and radiates light forward it works great...that's probably not an option for you, but don't despair, the non-glossy side of photo paper works great too...It just looks ghetto. But meh. 🙂

Also, 996 is right in that old flash units can work just as well for off camera use ( i use a $5 salvation army sunpak flash i found, works great, for example )--however, that's not always true, and is one of those "it depends" things. Having wireless ETTL is nice if you aren't in a studio where the subject is stationary. (love that I can trigger directly from 7d!) High speed sync is fun. The 430exII and 580exII are top flashes, build quality is excellent, and the mounting mechanism is worth the money imho. 🙂
 
Recently got a 430EX II as well....it exceeded my expectations...which were rather lofty. Actually I find it weird that I would thought I would go to an SLR to not use flash...now I love using it. While certain times ambient light is better for the work you are doing, more than often it can be better by using a flash.
 
like the previous post said, make a "better bounce card" with white foam craft paper from walmart.

these days i prefer to get by with fast primes and ambient lighting now instead of colormatching the flash with ambient. and yes, old film-body flashes are great for off-camera. i have three sb-26s for this purpose.
 
I recently got a 500EX on craigslist, but my pictures are coming out too harsh. Ill have to try diffusing the light with some of your ideas.

Also to OP and others.. If you are going to bounce off of a ceiling, make sure it isnt a drop ceiling with shiny gold tracks 🙂 Unless you want all of your subjects to be lined in gold reflection
 
Just play with it, try things out. Bounce off different stuff, try a piece of paper in the flash head to direct a bit of light on the subject while bouncing. Try cheap reflectors. Practice on still objects first so you don't wear the patience of sentient beings.


Someone told me a cutout milk jug placed over the flash makes a wonderful defuser.
 
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