Tangents

photography tutorials, reviews & workshops

tangents photography blog
learn : discuss : share
  • Tangents
  • Tutorials
    • Flash Photography
    • Wedding Photography
    • Studio Photography
    • Posing People
    • Understanding Your Camera
    • Exposure metering
    • BFT
    • Best Photo Books
  • Reviews
    • Sony
    • Nikon
    • Canon
    • Fuji
    • Profoto
    • lighting gear
  • Workshops
    • Info: Workshops
    • In-person
      tutoring sessions
    • Online
      tutoring sessions
    • Workshops in
      New Jersey (NJ)
    • Workshops in
      New York (NYC)
    • Photo walks in NYC
    • Studio Workshop
    • Video tutorials
    • Workshop results
  • Books
    • On-Camera Flash (revised ed.)
    • Direction & Quality of Light
    • Off-Camera Flash Photography
    • Lighting & Design
    • On-Camera Flash (1st ed.)
  • Projects
    • Two Perspectives
    • B&W Infrared
    • Vintage lenses
    • Time-lapse photography
  • Info
    • About
    • Contact
    • My Photo Gear
    • Books by NvN
    • Join us on Facebook
    • Acclaim
    • Success Stories

example: direct off-camera flash vs softbox

October 12, 2011 Neil vN 10 Comments

example: direct off-camera flash vs softbox (model: Ulorin Vex)

Ulorin Vex posing for us during part of the on-location session of the flash photography workshops which I presented in San Francisco earlier this year. Ulorin Vex is of course absolutely stunning, as always. While I often direct models how they should pose, this one is all her doing . Not even I can improve on that.

The image here at the top was shot with an off-camera softbox – my usual preferred Lastolite Ezybox softbox. The direction of the light here should immediately reveal the approximate position where the light was positioned. Just as comparison, we removed the two baffles of the Lastolite, to see how direct off-camera flash would compare. We kept the softbox hull in place, so it did help contain the spread of light a bit. As you’d expect, the results look more dramatic.

Here is the pull-back shot. As you’d immediately notice as well, I cloned out the intercom box, and cleaned up some distracting spots and marks on the metallic areas.

With the two comparative images, I wanted to help give an idea of how different the results can be. While my own preference is for soft light, direct off-camera flash is always an option. A softbox (or large umbrella) is a more forgiving light source though than direct flash. You have more leeway in placing your light in relation to your subject if you make it a large light source and diffuse it.

camera settings and details for both images:
1/200 @ f5.6 @ 200 ISO
The 2nd image was over-exposed by around 1.5 stops.
This is due to the light being more concentrated to the center of the image, which will affect the TTL metering compared to the image at the top where the entire area is evenly lit. Since the setting is metallic, that had to affect the TTL exposure metering as well.
Canon 5D mark II (B&H);  Canon 24-105mm f/4L IS  (B&H)
The camera was hand-held with the lens zoomed to 28mm and 40mm respectively.

Lastolite EZYBOX Softbox Kit (24″x24″) (B&H)
FlexTT5 transceiver (B&H);  AC3 ZoneController (B&H)
set-up as explained in this article on wireless TTL triggers for Canon

 

related articles

model – Ulorin Vex
change your position to change the direction of light  (Ulorin Vex in red)
mimicking window light with off-camera bounce flash  (Ulorin Vex in lace & latex corset)
directional light from off-camera bounce flash  (Ulorin Vex, Monaco foyer)
manual off-camera fill-flash (model: Ulorin Vex)

Filed Under: flash photography, lighting, models, off-camera flash, Ulorin Vex, Uncategorized Tagged With: Canon flash photography tips, flash photography techniques, off-camera flash, Ulorin Vex


 

Help support this website

If you find these articles of value, please help support this website by using these B&H and Amazon affiliate links to order your photo gear.

I also offer photography workshops and tutoring sessions, whether in person, or via online video tutoring sessions.

Please follow me on Instagram for more.

You can also join our thriving photo community in the Tangents group on Facebook, where we show our photos and discuss all things photography.

Thank you,

Neil vN

Books by Neil van Niekerk


 




10 Comments, Add Your Own

  1. 1Johnny Woods says

    October 12, 2011 at 6:43 am

    When using TTL, does your camera metering mode affect the way TTL meters for the scene? If you fill the frame with your model and activate FEL, would this take much of the reflectivity of the metal out of the equation?

    Reply
  2. 2Neil vN says

    October 12, 2011 at 7:00 am

    Johnny .. I haven’t been able to see any difference in TTL flash exposure between Spot-metering mode and Evaluative / Matrix mode, on the Canon and Nikon cameras that I’ve tried.

    I wouldn’t take this as the absolute word on this, but *I* haven’t been able to find a difference in the TTL exposure.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  3. 3mike says

    October 12, 2011 at 7:23 am

    Neil,
    I am going to buy my first softbox, How big of a group can you do with one 24×24 box?? Should I go to a larger box? It will be my only box for a while. I will be using a lightstand so whats the biggest box I can use without it crashing?

    Reply
  4. 4Neil vN says

    October 12, 2011 at 7:47 am

    Mike, I’ve lit up 8 people in a group with the softbox … but because I had to place it further back to get even light from left-to-right, the light gets contrasty. You’d be better off with a shoot-through umbrella then.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  5. 5Rbrong says

    October 12, 2011 at 8:10 am

    Lol Neil, i followed the link which showed you demonstrating the model pose and i nearly spit out my coffee laughing! The look on your face says it all….classic! Thanks!

    Reply
  6. 6Erwin Beckers says

    October 12, 2011 at 9:09 am

    Must say that I expected the direct off-camera flash to be much harder.
    Guess you balanced the flash with the ambient so the shadows are not as hard…

    Erwin

    Reply
  7. 7Kirk says

    November 1, 2011 at 6:26 am

    Neil;

    Again, a beautiful shot Neil. I am amazed at the lack of shadows with the use of the softbox. Great loop lighting on her face.

    Reply
  8. 8Neil vN says

    November 1, 2011 at 11:44 am

    Regarding the comments about the light on her being more flattering than you’d expect from direct flash, it is a combination of posing her towards the light in such a way that there are no weird shadows. Also, I think that keeping the softbox box on the light-stick, might very well have made the light source a bit larger (and hence softer) than actual direct unmodified flash.

    And then keep in mind that I did do some post-processing on the photo.

    Even though, these examples show how there is a difference between diffused flash (with a softbox), and undiffused flash.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  9. 9Howard says

    November 1, 2011 at 3:40 pm

    Hi, How about using a reflector and bouncing the ON-camera flash off of it?, instead of using a soft-box.

    Reply
  10. 10Neil vN says

    November 18, 2011 at 11:50 am

    Howard, that works very well when you’re using flash in low-light scenarios. With brighter light, you need to get much more flash on your subject, and then bouncing into a reflector doesn’t give enough light.

    Neil vN

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Neil vN Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

categories

Articles & Tutorials

  • • About myself & this site
    • Books by Neil vN
    • Best photography books
    • Black foamie thing
    • Photographers’ success stories
  • • Flash Photography Techniques
    • Natural looking flash
    • Flash + Ambient light
    • Dragging the shutter
    • Bouncing your flash
    • On-camera flash outdoors
    • Exposure metering
    • Flash exposure compensation
    • Bounce flash examples
    • Which is the best flashgun?
    • Flash brackets
    • Off-camera flash photography
    • Flash photography basics
    • Using video lights
    • Flash photography tips
  • • Photography workshops NJ / NYC
    • Models @ photography workshops
tutorials:
flash photography
Photography
Workshops

All rights reserved. Copyright © Neil van Niekerk 2025 · Customization by The Traveling Designer

Copyright © 2025 · NvN on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in