REPOSTED FROM BEGINNER FORUM
I'm trying to understand how my camera (Nikon D40) treats flash. The answers are not in the manual, to head off any suggestions to look on pages 34-35...
I normally shoot in Aperture mode and select the aperture based on the DoF that I want.
When I select fill flash, my shutter speed is fixed at 1/60. This is consistent with Nikon's online explanation.
I fired off a series of shots (somewhat backlit) from wide open to f/16, and predictably the backgrounds varied from overexposed to underexposed. The flashed subject stayed relatively correctly exposed, at least to my novice eyes. (I used the 50mm 1.4D)
When I switched to slow sync, the shutter speed varies to maintain a correct background exposure. The flashed subject, however, was overexposed (although easily corrected with flash compensation). I didn't repeat my previous experiment through several f-stops, so I don't know if I will have to continuously vary the flash compensation.
The fill flash behavior seems like a weakness; I would have thought that the shutter speed should still vary with aperture, perhaps moving down a third or two to compensate for the extra light from the flash. Instead, any picture I take at a large aperture will be overexposed due to the fixed shutter speed (and vice versa for small apertures).
How should I beat this? Am I having trouble understanding because I'm misapplying fill flash - i.e., it's only used at medium to small apertures when foreground and background should both be sharp? Why does fill flash fix the shutter speed? Does the flash in slow sync mode properly adjust output based on foreground concerns while the camera autoexposure handles the background? Should I give up and stick to daylight shots with no backlighting?
I'm trying to understand how my camera (Nikon D40) treats flash. The answers are not in the manual, to head off any suggestions to look on pages 34-35...
I normally shoot in Aperture mode and select the aperture based on the DoF that I want.
When I select fill flash, my shutter speed is fixed at 1/60. This is consistent with Nikon's online explanation.
I fired off a series of shots (somewhat backlit) from wide open to f/16, and predictably the backgrounds varied from overexposed to underexposed. The flashed subject stayed relatively correctly exposed, at least to my novice eyes. (I used the 50mm 1.4D)
When I switched to slow sync, the shutter speed varies to maintain a correct background exposure. The flashed subject, however, was overexposed (although easily corrected with flash compensation). I didn't repeat my previous experiment through several f-stops, so I don't know if I will have to continuously vary the flash compensation.
The fill flash behavior seems like a weakness; I would have thought that the shutter speed should still vary with aperture, perhaps moving down a third or two to compensate for the extra light from the flash. Instead, any picture I take at a large aperture will be overexposed due to the fixed shutter speed (and vice versa for small apertures).
How should I beat this? Am I having trouble understanding because I'm misapplying fill flash - i.e., it's only used at medium to small apertures when foreground and background should both be sharp? Why does fill flash fix the shutter speed? Does the flash in slow sync mode properly adjust output based on foreground concerns while the camera autoexposure handles the background? Should I give up and stick to daylight shots with no backlighting?