Wedding Reception Lighting Setup
ericanicole
Registered Users Posts: 3 Beginner grinner
Hello, I'm new here A friend told me this is a great place to go for solid answers and a friendly community. SO, I'd like to pose my question.
I am really wanting to make my wedding reception photos better, and the use of a single speedlite isn't cutting it. I have 2 weddings next month, and I really want to step it up with lighting.
I am shooting with a Nikon d700, and my light is an SB900. I am wondering what my best setup would be. I think I am going to keep my 900 on camera, and put two other light sources in the hall, and trigger them wirelessly. I was thinking of getting 2 vivitar flashes since they're cheap and my heart won't be broken if something happens to one of them. I also wanted to be able to possibly use the setup for group formals, both inside the church and outside. I need suggestions for a wireless system, flashes, light stands, etc. It seems that the more research I do, the more overwhelmed I get! Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
I am really wanting to make my wedding reception photos better, and the use of a single speedlite isn't cutting it. I have 2 weddings next month, and I really want to step it up with lighting.
I am shooting with a Nikon d700, and my light is an SB900. I am wondering what my best setup would be. I think I am going to keep my 900 on camera, and put two other light sources in the hall, and trigger them wirelessly. I was thinking of getting 2 vivitar flashes since they're cheap and my heart won't be broken if something happens to one of them. I also wanted to be able to possibly use the setup for group formals, both inside the church and outside. I need suggestions for a wireless system, flashes, light stands, etc. It seems that the more research I do, the more overwhelmed I get! Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
0
Comments
My recommendation is to rent a pair of Nikon flashes, the SB-800 flashes are still great for wedding/event work, and to use some sort of radio/slave set. The reason to use radio triggers is because, at weddings and events, there may be other shooters with similar equipment. If you try to use an optical master/slaves setup there is a good chance for interference with your shooting. Radio sets largely reduce the problem.
You may want to rent some studio flashes for the formals. I greatly prefer having mains-powered units with fan cooling over portable flashes for the formals. I also try to use studio monolights for outdoor formals when possible. It's far easier to overpower the sun with a pair of 1800 effective watt-second units even using reflector umbrellas.
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