Wedding Guests Complain Strobes are Too Bright
Hi Everyone,
I have had several different guests at different weddings complain about my AlienBees 800 strobes being too bright.
I was using them to illuminate large ball rooms or tents during evening receptions to shoot introductions, dancing, etc. In all cases, I had the AB800s on the lowest power output. I must admit, they are still very bright and disruptive at this output when the room is very dark.
Prior to starting my own business, I assisted a well-established wedding photographer who routinely used her AlienBees for entire receptions and she said she never had anyone complain. She had slightly less powerful models than I use, but she often put them at higher outputs.
Lately I have just been bouncing my Nikon speedlights off of ceilings and walls since I don't want to upset clients. But I would like to figure out a way to use my more efficient and convenient AlienBees. I've done some searching and discovered that a lot of photographers won't use strobes at dark events as they are too invasive. Was the photographer I worked with incredibly unique or have I just had bad clients?
Does anyone have some tips on setting up the lights or modifying them to reduce complaints?
I have had several different guests at different weddings complain about my AlienBees 800 strobes being too bright.
I was using them to illuminate large ball rooms or tents during evening receptions to shoot introductions, dancing, etc. In all cases, I had the AB800s on the lowest power output. I must admit, they are still very bright and disruptive at this output when the room is very dark.
Prior to starting my own business, I assisted a well-established wedding photographer who routinely used her AlienBees for entire receptions and she said she never had anyone complain. She had slightly less powerful models than I use, but she often put them at higher outputs.
Lately I have just been bouncing my Nikon speedlights off of ceilings and walls since I don't want to upset clients. But I would like to figure out a way to use my more efficient and convenient AlienBees. I've done some searching and discovered that a lot of photographers won't use strobes at dark events as they are too invasive. Was the photographer I worked with incredibly unique or have I just had bad clients?
Does anyone have some tips on setting up the lights or modifying them to reduce complaints?
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Comments
I occasionally use monolights at receptions and events, and I do trim the lights to lowest power. When the DJ switches to their "mood lighting" with house lights off, or in a tent at night, I typically just use hot shoe external flash and modifiers.
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My rule of thumb is, if I use flash it should NOT be causing me to turn my ISO down below 1600 / 3200. Just because I can, doesn't mean I should. I use small hotshoe strobes usually set to 1/16 or 1/32 power, with a warming gel on them so they match the color temp of the ambient light. 2-4 of these lights in the far corners of the room, and you're good to go at ISO 3200, f/2.8, and ~1/100 - 1/200 sec.
Also, during certain special times of the night, such as prayers, toasts, and first dances, I try and shoot ambient if I can. If the venue lighting has any sort of light shining on the dance floor, then I can rock an 85 prime wide open with ISO 3200, and again I'm good togo. Sometimes for toasting etc. I'll use a single off-camera hotshoe flash, snooted very heavily, with the beam pointed right towards the person giving the toast, or the first dance, at 1/32 or 1/64 power.
I'm as much of a wireless flash gearhead as the next guy, but I honestly don't think that a wedding reception is a good place to be busting out studio strobes. Your shots should capture the ambiance of the evening as often as possible... At least, that's my own style and that's the style that I believe many clients appreciate...
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
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It looks like my best friend in the world will be getting married some time next summer in California. Since I'm going to be in the wedding, I thought I'd reach out to you about the areas you cover out there. Send me a message!
Anouther thing, If I feel flash would help with the shot can I just leave it as E-TTL on the 7D and manual the ISO along with flash exposure compensation to get a weak flash?
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=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
Exactly. Spill kills. Any time I'm pointing a flash at people during a reception, it gets gridded / snooted. That makes it far less obtrusive to everybody else standing around; and the person being "flashed" is never looking directly into the flash anyways...
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No, it is not that using flash is taboo. In fact I supplement ISO 3200 "ambient" light with flash all the time. I just use hotshoe strobes at low power, I keep ISO 3200 going, but maybe I bump my shutter speed up to the sync limit to maintain sharpness. This keeps that dimly lit ambient feeling. (if the flashes are bounced properly, both on-camera and off) So it is not that you should avoid flash at all costs in a dimly lit situation, it is just that 1.) The couple would probably appreciate as many photos as possible that replicate that beautiful mood lighting, whether or not you use flash to supplement, and 2.) the darker it is, the more people are going to be blinded if you use a huge strobe pack that spills all over the place. (See our discussion about using a grid / snoot to direct the light towards a singular subject, instead of lighting the whole room...)
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum