Photographing The Movement Of Dancers Using Speedlights And Long Exposure

Tiffany Mueller

Tiffany Mueller is a photographer and content strategist based in Hawi, Hawaii. Her work has been shared by top publications like The New York Times, Adobe, and others.

dancer

Photographer, Phillip McCordall, has put together a great video tutorial explaining the how he uses a combination of studio lighting, slow shutter speeds, and rear curtain sync to create almost atmospheric photographs of dancers, such as the photo you see above. While there are many applications in which you can use this technique on, the graceful leaps of the dancer are really eye catching when you are able to illustrate the motion of them, too.

If you’re not already familiar with rear curtain sync, this could be a really fun project for you learn it with. To put it briefly, when shooting with a rear curtain sync, the flash will fire at the end of the exposure rather than the beginning of the exposure. When used with a slow shutter speed, this allows you to record motion (as a blur) using only the ambient light at the beginning of the exposure, then right before the shutter closes, the flash will fire and freeze the motion.

This kind of technique is exactly what McCordall breaks down for us in the video below. (And don’t forget to check out his DIY reflectors at about the 2:37 mark!)

YouTube video

[ via The Phoblographer ]

Filed Under:

Tagged With:

Find this interesting? Share it with your friends!

Tiffany Mueller

Tiffany Mueller

Tiffany Mueller is a photographer and content strategist based in Hawi, Hawaii. Her work has been shared by top publications like The New York Times, Adobe, and others.

Join the Discussion

DIYP Comment Policy
Be nice, be on-topic, no personal information or flames.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

6 responses to “Photographing The Movement Of Dancers Using Speedlights And Long Exposure”

  1. Peter Olofson Avatar
    Peter Olofson

    Can you tell the brand of the small beauty dish for the cannon flash?

    1. phillip mccordall Avatar
      phillip mccordall

      It’s from a set,

      http://www.amazon.co.uk/o/ASIN/B00EVI7LVI/?tag=photograph01f-21

      Lots of grey things in the set, barn doors, snoot etc.

  2. Ankit Gajjar Avatar
    Ankit Gajjar

    Wow…what a wonderful and simple technique…thanks for sharing..

  3. Olga Werner Avatar
    Olga Werner

    Funny guy, nice to watch this video. Thanks for sharing the great technique.

  4. Sun Kyong Kim Avatar
    Sun Kyong Kim

    Nice work. Well, from one of my flash class, I tried to shoot that kind of portrait but the background light was not even which made me crazy. I put one 1X3 soft box on the left side and I put 2XTungston lights on the right sides. I put 2X giant flat board for both light sources. Well yeah.

  5. Mercedes Avatar
    Mercedes

    Great video!!!! Excellent!! I will try this tomorrow and let you know the results.