Wedding Portraits with Off Camera Flash Techniques
Our wedding portrait lighting can take form of our LED video light, our Studio strobes and our Canon flashes. We almost always use Off Camera Flash Techniques for our portraits to create images with “drama”. The use of a particular light source really depends on the lighting conditions and the vision for our shoot. Many people don’t understand why we use flash for our daytime portraits, after all you have all of the light that you may need from the sun. As long as you expose for the subject, why does it matter what happens to the background. Maxim Photo Studio is known for our use of Off Camera lighting. Here are some examples from this year.

Off-camera flash was used during our wedding day coverage.
Our lighting can take the form of our LED video light, our Studio strobes, and our Canon flashes. The use of a particular light source really depends on the lighting conditions and the vision for our shoot. Many people don’t understand why we use flash for our daytime portraits, after all you have all of the light that you may need from the sun. As long as you expose for the subject, why does it matter what happens to the background. The issue with daylight portraits without flash is that it creates shadows in the eye sockets and gives almost a “lifeless” appearance since the eyes are darkened. The eye socket shadows are sometimes called “raccoon eyes” and very unflattering. Also if the background is bright, then it will be completely over exposed. The way that many photographers overcome this is (as I have in my early career) is to expose for the subject and forget the background. Here is an image from my first wedding ever back in 2005 where I didn’t use flash and had to lighten the image so that I wouldn’t get those nasty eye shadows. As a result, the sky is a muddled white mess with no details. This unfortunately is how many wedding photographers still choose to create their portraits.



