Harry Bizzle wrote:
You must shoot in Manual mode.
Essentially, what you need to remember is that your flash does not care what shutter speed you're at - it's pop lasts less than like 1/10,000. The only thing that affects it is your aperture.
So if you want to balance flash with ambient, e.g. a sunset, you use your shutter to kill the ambient light to expose the sunset, and then use the aperture to sort out the flash exposure (or you can just power down/up the flash).
I was shooting in manual, but the thing about the aperture is news to me. I'll try some things out, see if I can't get it to behave.
"Edit": Can't seem to get it working. The pictures come out brighter with just the pop-up flash than if I use the pop-up flash to trigger the other one. Changing the power of the Yong Nuo doesn't seem to do much. Changing the aperture, I could see the effect it has with the flash on the camera, but not when triggering it off the camera.
"Edit 2": Found this on another forum:
Quote:
The on board flash emits a preflash that's fooling your Strobes to fire early
And this:
Quote:
there is a clunky work around by pressing the FEL button and hold let the strobes fire recharge then hit the shutter button .
Tried that and it works, but damn that's clunky. Buying radio triggers ASAP.
Harry Bizzle wrote:
Did you light that church with your flash? It is siiiiiick.
Nah, it's just lit up like that at night. Besides, I'd need two flashes to get it lit up like that. And it's quite a tall tower so there would probably be significant light falloff. Or maybe I'm underestimating just how powerful a flash can be. Search for Landakotskirkja in Google Earth to get an idea of the size of it.