How to Balance Indoor and Outdoor light: Exploring Photography with Mark Wallace

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • www.adorama.com
    In this episode Mark Wallace demonstrates three ways to add light to interior room to match the bright light from the sun. After watching this tutorial you'll be able to balance the light so your interior shots look natural with the light from outside. Mark shows how you can use a speedlight, a small off-camera flash, and even a fully manual studio setup.
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    Photos by Mark Wallace
    www.markonabike.com/
    www.markwallacephotography.com/
    Model: Natasha Palackovich
    Like, share, and comment on the video below...let's get the conversation started!
    If you have questions, please share them below.
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Komentáře • 234

  • @airjaff
    @airjaff Před 7 lety +19

    Got to congratulate this model for being in a constant mood throughout. What a joy to work with I'm sure!

    • @MarkWallaceVideos
      @MarkWallaceVideos Před 3 lety +22

      She was a fantastic model and a great person. I was in the Czechia and she did not speak English. I think she was amazing considering she had no idea what I was saying the entire time. 10/10. I'd work with her any day. :)

    • @halarput6205
      @halarput6205 Před 3 lety

      Robo-model :D. Thanks for the content though!!

  • @vimalneha
    @vimalneha Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is the best explanation ever!

  • @manfredoetting7694
    @manfredoetting7694 Před 6 lety +3

    Dear Mark Wallace, as I am not a native speaker the written subtitles in your video make that I completely understand what you are telling. And I learn new words. Thank you so much for that help! Your videos ar so helpful.

  • @DaveSincere
    @DaveSincere Před 6 lety +4

    That final picture is PERFECTION..

  • @LyndonPatrickSmith
    @LyndonPatrickSmith Před 7 lety

    Great video. I really like Mark's teaching style. Natasha is stunning!

  • @Fmacian59
    @Fmacian59 Před 4 lety

    Muy buen video, Mark. Gracias por compartir tus conocimientos.
    Very good video, Mark. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

  • @LRSS2455
    @LRSS2455 Před 7 lety +13

    I always love these instructional videos using flash.

  • @davidutv
    @davidutv Před 7 lety

    Long time since I caught up with your work Mark. Nice job, as always!

  • @mikerichard1019
    @mikerichard1019 Před rokem

    U make others looks easy n in proper way step by step ... What a teacher salute 🫡🫡🫡🫶

  • @eduardomedeiros8308
    @eduardomedeiros8308 Před 7 lety

    Perfect balance of the light!

  • @NewsMoto
    @NewsMoto Před 7 lety +6

    Great content guys! Keep it up!

  • @NIBRAS3
    @NIBRAS3 Před 6 lety

    Thank You So Much for this Wonderful Video. You can be a great Teacher.. No You are a great Teacher.

  • @sandysatryawan8951
    @sandysatryawan8951 Před 5 lety +1

    Super vid 👍 thank you mister flash, great job, i like it ❤️

  • @AnchorKitMedia
    @AnchorKitMedia Před 6 lety

    Thanks Mark for the great advice !!!

  • @craigl.mcallester9610
    @craigl.mcallester9610 Před 5 lety

    You always make it look easy!

  • @supriyodutta2141
    @supriyodutta2141 Před 6 lety

    This is very useful video for newcomers in photography.

  • @agentaxe
    @agentaxe Před 5 lety

    Ceiling photo was awesome for me!Nice video!

  • @StunnafulPhotography
    @StunnafulPhotography Před 6 lety

    Nice video man! Always enjoy viewing your vids!

  • @basantagautam8224
    @basantagautam8224 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for sharing this tutorial video.

  • @monsieurNede
    @monsieurNede Před 7 lety +1

    "hoo it's spring"
    now you have a story to tell in your picture :D

  • @pianoman6639
    @pianoman6639 Před 2 lety

    Many thanks Mark , brilliant video

  • @pesthlm
    @pesthlm Před 6 lety

    Thank you for this information and many thanks to the very pretty model :-)

  • @SsgtHolland
    @SsgtHolland Před 7 lety

    Mark, you're stil the king of photo tuts!
    Are you still 'walking the earth'?

  • @Narsuitus
    @Narsuitus Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video.
    I tend to balance indoor and outdoor light when shooting group portraits and interior architecture.
    I also prefer to use lenses with leaf shutters instead of cameras with focal plane shutters. The leaf shutters give me higher flash sync speeds.
    Since most of my cameras do not have a TTL flash feature, I prefer to use the manual method for balancing ambient indoor light with outdoor light.

  • @kyannawar
    @kyannawar Před 7 lety +1

    thanks, for most power full tips i lik

  • @tmhart43
    @tmhart43 Před rokem

    Always great teaching!

  • @tuxenia
    @tuxenia Před 6 lety +3

    Great tutorial, thanks. Most of us don't have option 2 and 3. There's perhaps an option 4: multiple flash

  • @IramRolon
    @IramRolon Před 3 lety

    Love your tutorials! Very good instructional video. Thank you very much for the same 👍😎

  • @vijaykumarmuthukrishnan6648

    Nice Teaching, I Love It.

  • @johnwyliejr347
    @johnwyliejr347 Před 7 lety

    Excellent Mark.

  • @vishweshwarkandalgaonkar3446

    Thanks for sharing valuable information

  • @Tracks777
    @Tracks777 Před 7 lety

    Great! Keep it up!

  • @arohila
    @arohila Před 7 lety

    This was very helpful, thank you. It would be nice to be able to do this for people on a budget.

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před rokem

      A flash is one of the lowest-cost accessories for photography and one of the most useful. The very good but low-cost 3rd party flash greatly expands your options for about $50, an umbrella might be $10 or less and a light stand would be $14. The umbrella and light stand are not essential so there is almost nothing in photography that increases options more than a flash. I built my own high power strobes of my own design but they are too big and heavy to use outside the studio, so I bought a flash from my camera brand, Nikon that was about $600. Evenutally I bought 3 of them but needed a 4th for a project so I got as cheap $50 flash and found so little difference that I ended up getting more advanced models for $150 that included important wireless functions that became my main flash units that allowed complete control from the camera of external lights by radio connection. None of my 7 speed lights have failed except my more expensive Nikon SB-900 but I was able to repair that with a $1.6- capacitor. I used these in pro sessions all the time and seldom use the large studio strobes.
      The two main manufacturers of low-cost speed lights, although there are many others, are Yongnuo which I have, and Godox. The latter are more expensive possibly because they heavily advertise and both are reliable. My main speed lights with wireless remote control are the Yongnuo YN968N (N for Nikon but they have models for other major camera brands ) so the flash can act as a 4-channel controller of additional lights or as a slave. Other features include built-in video light. My first Speedlight from that brand is the YN568 for $50 and it would be effective for most photographers.
      For location or studio portraiture or still life, light modifiers are very reasonable, with umbrellas being very low cost, and for a bit more softboxes are available so learning to use augmented light is one of the lowest cost and most dramatic improvement in options for a photographer. I would much rather have good lighting than more expensive lenses because light and control of it IS photography. It is not just having more light but its direction, width and speed, so you have two or more sources of light, ambient that can be more or less strength than the scene requires, plus you control the speed lights that give additional options in speed of capture because the speed light or studio strobe has a very short light pulse duration. That means you have more control of ambient light exposure of any duration plus the Speedlight at a very short duration that allows balancing the two to cover almost any lighting conditions, even in bright outdoor sunlight. Good luck!

  • @TheRealBizWiz
    @TheRealBizWiz Před 6 lety

    *Hey this is great stuff. :-)*
    _Thank you so much!_
    *_LIKED, SUBSCRIBED & SHARED!_*

  • @CHATHK
    @CHATHK Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much for this video

  • @tangaroa678
    @tangaroa678 Před 7 lety +2

    Looking at some flowers and thinking it's, err... spring. Classic!

  • @ahmedayari6889
    @ahmedayari6889 Před 5 lety

    thank you very much Mark

  • @andredesantana2188
    @andredesantana2188 Před 7 lety

    Nice video, thank you !

  • @rickypermall9095
    @rickypermall9095 Před 7 lety

    Great tutorial

  • @jorgevelasquez9955
    @jorgevelasquez9955 Před 2 lety

    So good ! Thanks!

  • @opwave79
    @opwave79 Před 7 lety +5

    This is very useful. My brother is the strobist. He's too busy working to explain all this to me, lol.

  • @PHOTOREACTION
    @PHOTOREACTION Před 3 lety

    Just excellent!

  • @PIXELvoiz
    @PIXELvoiz Před 4 lety

    nice tutorial and beautiful model

  • @donniezhang4890
    @donniezhang4890 Před 3 lety

    very nice pictures,learning to more

  • @ssdigitalssuresh9697
    @ssdigitalssuresh9697 Před 2 lety

    Sir by seeing your video's we learn more subject... Thank you sir

  • @JhunBana
    @JhunBana Před 6 lety

    Love learning so much from all Adorama videos. I got a problem with this kind of shot last week, it's in a medium sized hotel room with windows facing a great nightview of glittering Skyskappers. I couldn't make the view outside appear. I hope you guys could make a video tutorial from this kind of scenario.

    • @allthecommonsense
      @allthecommonsense Před 4 lety

      Shoot on a tripod. All your shots will have the dark window with no view. At the end, turn off the lights in the room and set your shutter speed slow enough to get a good exposure on the outside view. Then use Photoshop masking & layers to underlay that well-exposed view into the window area of any of the shots that have a dark view. Might have to be a blend between the 2 shots to preserve some of the reflection of the glass.

  • @JoeDoeOutdoors
    @JoeDoeOutdoors Před 6 lety

    Hey sweet channel ☺ Keep it up!

  • @rafabcm
    @rafabcm Před 7 lety

    Thank You!

  •  Před 7 lety

    Genial Mark, saludos desde Costa Rica.

  • @manoharmgr8235
    @manoharmgr8235 Před 3 lety

    Very useful video , I learned lot from it, looking forward more videos like this keep it up good work, R.manohar , india,chennai

  • @madhusoodanshimoga5725

    Great tutorial as always. One question though, when metering ambient light, you use matrix mode I guess in all three situations.

  • @SwissplWatches
    @SwissplWatches Před 6 lety

    Great video

  • @DazzittoPhotography
    @DazzittoPhotography Před 7 lety

    Great vid. You triggered the Acute2 with your PW. Been trying to do it with a Wistro 360, can you please explain. Thanks

  • @eustacevictor2177
    @eustacevictor2177 Před 6 lety

    Great stuff

  • @meadrasheed943
    @meadrasheed943 Před 7 lety

    Thanks for sharing

  • @polbalaoro4082
    @polbalaoro4082 Před 7 lety

    thanks for the info mark.

  • @artsandeducation7716
    @artsandeducation7716 Před 7 lety

    Lot of thank

  • @talshay12
    @talshay12 Před 7 lety

    Great thanks

  • @axelferis
    @axelferis Před 5 lety

    great!!!!

  • @riazmustafa5294
    @riazmustafa5294 Před 2 lety

    fantastic dear

  • @stevecraig9384
    @stevecraig9384 Před 6 lety

    Mark, would you do a video on shooting in a room with florescent lights using a speed light.

  • @kashie007
    @kashie007 Před 6 lety

    What white balance would you use in camera when flash and ambient light sources are present?

  • @sabyasachichatterjee2533

    Thanks..!

  • @nonvegnani5560
    @nonvegnani5560 Před 4 lety

    THANK YOU

  • @ditorres9884
    @ditorres9884 Před 6 lety +11

    Nice video. My only question is where can i get an android like Natasha?

  • @phynx2006
    @phynx2006 Před 7 lety

    Very interesting and helpful. How do the arms feel after using that big heavy camera hahaha, just kidding love the Canon

  • @claud9999
    @claud9999 Před 7 lety +5

    Nice demo of balancing daylight and flash. No discussion of light source color temperatures?

    • @MarkWallaceVideos
      @MarkWallaceVideos Před 7 lety +8

      Daylight and flash are both around 5200K, so no gel needed in this setup. Perhaps I'll cover mixed color temps in a future video.

    • @AE5X
      @AE5X Před 7 lety

      Yes, please do.

  • @jatisetiawan
    @jatisetiawan Před 7 lety

    How about using on camera speedlight with a flash diffuser such as gary fong's lightsphere?

  • @MxprodStudio
    @MxprodStudio Před 6 lety

    How do you use airmote With acute ?

  • @Flexpicker
    @Flexpicker Před 7 lety +1

    Nice video, Mark. I always enjoy the posts by you and Gavin. I was wondering if a polarizing filter would reduce the glare of the flash on the model's face? I'd rather not take a large amount of equipment to a site, and a polarizer would fit in my pocket better than an Octobox. Thanks.

    • @thehumanityoflife6460
      @thehumanityoflife6460 Před 2 lety

      Did it work using the polarizer?

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před rokem

      The best way is to get the relative light source diameter larger but get closer to the subject and additionally control natural oil from the skin with blotting papers or matte powder. A small Speedlight with a small umbrella close into the subject can solve that problem for close-ups but if you need to have the subject illuminated by a more distant source, the light sources must be large relative to the subject. Using the rear wall and ceiling as a gigantic softbox can do that if the lights are pointed towards the rear and rear ceiling.
      Oil on the skin is highly variable with age and skin condition. I have a favorite subject, a very pretty jazz singer who is but the second half of the first set looks like an oil well, 36 years old who is really beautiful so I only shoot performances for the first song of each set. But it is also a sign that their skin will look great far longer than people with drier skin. She will still be in demand for modeling assignments into her 40s and 50s, while her age cohorts have given up modeling years before. I always carry blotting paper and a few different matte powders in my sling bag with 1-2 wireless flashes, 2 lenses and a camera when out and about in the city.

  • @MrMattNoir
    @MrMattNoir Před 7 lety

    I would need this outside and large house first...

  • @milindkulkarni9156
    @milindkulkarni9156 Před 5 lety +1

    Can you please detail about how to take in-camera meter readinng (you have taken f-value of the light coming from the rees, in this video). Thanks

    • @thehumanityoflife6460
      @thehumanityoflife6460 Před 2 lety

      He set the camera on APERTURE PREFERRED, set the ISO at maximum flash setting for his camera at 200, and let the camera set the shutter speed.

  • @koisanx7490
    @koisanx7490 Před 7 lety

    ...great video ...kinda reminded me of a question i had about locations ...say a client requires a hotel for location ...who pays for the hotel ...the photographer or the client?

    • @allthecommonsense
      @allthecommonsense Před 4 lety +1

      Photographer pays and includes the cost in the bill to the client.

  • @socksonfeet8125
    @socksonfeet8125 Před rokem

    if you have to use a large soft box flash, why not setup a large soft box always on bright lamp in its place? What would be the difference? Why would you use flash instead of a large light source is my question? I'm still learning and curious about things like this.

  • @danad8716
    @danad8716 Před 7 lety

    Excellent video Mark. Natasha seems a little camera shy. Also, what is with the bare foot photographer?

  • @adeypoos
    @adeypoos Před 7 lety +10

    Mark has spent so much money on his lighting equipment he couldn't even afford some footwear!

  • @keithbarrett4630
    @keithbarrett4630 Před 2 lety

    Shooting in bare feet.... like a boss!

  • @Doofy_Shorts
    @Doofy_Shorts Před 7 lety

    What was the power of each flash unit?

  • @godson9837
    @godson9837 Před 6 lety

    how can I use the metering system

  • @danmorgan9447
    @danmorgan9447 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for the explanations. But what if I wanted a shallow depth of field while using a Profoto 1200 pack? it would be pretty tricky to handle this window light with your x-sync (1/200th) and not having a HSS on your remote.

  • @FerdinandFabros
    @FerdinandFabros Před 6 lety

    im inloved with her

  • @DiganntSurti
    @DiganntSurti Před 3 lety

    Sir, which light meter you were using in this video?

  • @joshuagharis9017
    @joshuagharis9017 Před 3 lety

    If I must use on camera flash, I use the rogue flash bender

  • @rondrake6500
    @rondrake6500 Před 6 lety

    love this video. im lost in one part. when you set your camera to manual, 1/200 iso 100 to meter off the trees...how does it set the f stop to f4.0 Im confused!

    • @Scarczar
      @Scarczar Před 5 lety +1

      adjust the f stop till you get right metering. thats how he got f4. it could have been 2.8 or 5.6 but he got f4 so he shot at that aperture.

  • @andrew1977uk
    @andrew1977uk Před 7 lety

    Window light lends itself as a soft box in itself. This is one time I'd actually go natural light, this is subjective of course.

  • @b991228
    @b991228 Před 6 lety

    If you have light coming through tree leaves that is causing a marked green hue with the ambient light how do you compensate for difference in colors between the ambient and flash?

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před rokem

      There is no need to, since the green tint light is not illuminating the camera side of the model

  • @modyaldosery5123
    @modyaldosery5123 Před 5 lety

    how i meter light using camera ttl?

  • @commercialand
    @commercialand Před 6 lety

    What about shooting video, I am new to lighting techniques, and I had my son you against a very bright window and he was just a silhouette. Should I still use a soft box for this? or more directional light at his body?

    • @allthecommonsense
      @allthecommonsense Před 4 lety +1

      Yes you need a constant video light (usually daylight balanced fluorescent bulbs or LEDs these days) with enough power to bring up the subject to proper exposure.

  • @jaytad5420
    @jaytad5420 Před 3 lety

    Mark. I decided to experiment all your videos and started with this. I am not sure how to meter with the camera, is there a episode on how to do it. I dont want to buy any meter reading gear for now. Thx

    • @thehumanityoflife6460
      @thehumanityoflife6460 Před 2 lety

      You need a hand-held light meter with INCIDENT mode and place it near the model but pointed towards the studio light. Keep adjusting the studio light power when doing the test flash until the F-stop reading matches the outdoor F-stop reading. Buy a used digital hand-held light meter, you'll save some money.

  • @TroyDurrance
    @TroyDurrance Před 7 lety

    Why, in the first technique, was the flash set to 'high speed sync' and not just ettl?

    • @MarkWallaceVideos
      @MarkWallaceVideos Před 7 lety +1

      Because the shutter speed was faster than sync speed. You need HSS to shoot with faster shutter speeds.

  • @iShanus
    @iShanus Před 7 lety

    awe its spring.

  • @qwe1231
    @qwe1231 Před 7 lety

    Bounced image at 3:00 looks better than direct flash earlier.

    • @carlmazziotti221
      @carlmazziotti221 Před 4 lety

      And shooting in raw allows for plenty of exposure adjusting in post if you aren't 100% in love with the results.

  • @rodolfhenriquez9355
    @rodolfhenriquez9355 Před 4 lety +1

    Love your show but I am still confused at why shooting still or non movable objects whit Hi Speed flash while same can be achieve with TTL

    • @thehumanityoflife6460
      @thehumanityoflife6460 Před 2 lety

      Troy Durrance
      4 years ago
      Why, in the first technique, was the flash set to 'high speed sync' and not just ettl?

      Mark Wallace
      4 years ago
      Because the shutter speed was faster than sync speed. You need HSS to shoot with faster shutter speeds.

  • @naturegood515
    @naturegood515 Před 5 lety

    Natasha likes your flash

  • @philkdc
    @philkdc Před 7 lety

    In the last example Mark used manual settings and the flash speed was set to the camera's sync speed of 1/200. But two of the "after" photos showed flash speed at 1/400. Did Mark change to HSS? If so, why?

    • @MarkWallaceVideos
      @MarkWallaceVideos Před 7 lety

      Those were images from the first two setups, the text on the bottom of the screen denotes what flash I was using.

  • @AnalyseSciences
    @AnalyseSciences Před rokem

    you can not use high speed sync with Godox V1 without trigger

  • @TMM6900
    @TMM6900 Před 7 lety +2

    what metering mode need to be in?

    • @chibuzonweze3291
      @chibuzonweze3291 Před 4 lety

      Most likely evaluative to balance the light in the frame

  • @michaelfranzyshen8241
    @michaelfranzyshen8241 Před 5 lety

    How do you typically handle the white balance in a mixed light scene like this? Shoot a white balance card?

    • @patrickcooperstockfootage1185
      @patrickcooperstockfootage1185 Před 3 lety

      I wouldn't call this is a mixed lighting scenario with regards to colour temperature. Sunlight and flash have approximately the same colour temperature. A WB setting for one should be fine for the other.

  • @bbcnhkandcnnspecialnewsand3744

    DA 16-50mm f2.8, DA 50-135mm f2.8, DA 70-200mm f2.8 which one is better? If you have a limited buying capacity!

    • @thehumanityoflife6460
      @thehumanityoflife6460 Před 2 lety

      I would pick 24-105mm. 24 good for video mode and wide angle still photos, 50 for full body photo, and 105 for portrait photo.

  • @RodelCasio
    @RodelCasio Před rokem

    What brand is the light stand with wheels?