Bounce with the Built in Flash
May 1st, 2007Most cameras have a built in flash, and most aspiring photographers learn quite quickly just how horrible the results from this flash can be. A little research on the web will of course teach our aspiring photographer that the absolute minimum to get some decent results is either off camera flash, or more often bounce flash.This gives
a
softer more
natural light
Bounce flash is when the light of the flash unit is bounced off the ceiling (or nearby wall) onto the person/object being photographed. This gives a softer light, coming from a more natural position. You’re subjects will now look like they are standing under normal lighting, and not caught in the headlights of an oncoming 18 wheeler.
Now if you buy any modern flash unit, it will almost certainly have bounce capability (and swivel if you want to bounce of walls, or the ceiling when using it in portrait mode). Yet perhaps you don’t have the cash for a separate flash unit, or you just don’t like the bulk it adds to your camera; yet you still want to use bounce flash. Well it’s pretty simple really; and cheap.
Tin foil.
Just take a piece of tin foil and hold it in front of the camera’s flash, at about a 45 degree angle to the ceiling. With a DSLR, the tin foil can be moulded to fit around the pop up flash, meaning you don’t even have to worry about holding it. Now of course the flash is going to have to travel a little bit more distance, and tin foil isn’t perfectly reflective, so you will have slightly less light; but that’s still better than giving your subject a deer in the headlights look.
Of course if you don’t mind spending a bit of cash, you might want to let someone else do all the work and just purchase The Scoop from Professor Kobré
