How to Put Studio Flash for Outdoor Photography
- 1). Decide on a location for the flash unit. If you want a front fill light for a back-lit exposure, the flash will be directly in front of the subject, pointed directly at the back light source. If you need a side fill, the flash unit will be slightly to the side of the subject.
- 2). Place the flash stand or tripod on the flattest, most stable surface available, if you are using one. Some stands or tripods have retractable feet that pull back to reveal spikes; if so, retract the feet and push the spikes into the ground for additional stabilization.
- 3). Mount the flash unit on the stand or tripod. If you are using a flash gun instead of a tripod, mount the flash unit on the flash gun.
- 4). Place the flash diffuser or softbox on the flash unit, if you are using a flash modifier.
- 5). Set your camera to manual mode.
- 6). Point the camera at the subject’s background and hold the shutter button down halfway to meter the exposure. Metering the exposure for the background instead of the subject will ensure that the background isn’t over-exposed and blown out in the final image. Adjust the shutter speed and aperture until the exposure meters to “+0.”
- 7). Adjust the flash unit’s aperture value to match the camera’s correct metering.
- 8). Compose the shot and take the picture.