> Good advice! Thanks! Multiple with bounce would be one with the camera and
> the other at the back of the cabin?
Not necessarily. Let's say you were shooting across the cabin from one
side to the other at a diagonal. For example, you are shooting back to
front with a camera position of cabin left facing cabin right. I'd
experiment with placing a flash aiming at the cabin wall/ceiling just
to the left of the camera. This will bounce fill the right side of the
cabin.
Basics say that flash exposure is ALWAYS flash-subject distance, not
camera-subject distance. If I was photographing the seating/table
position of cabin right, I'd probably be placing two flashes hidden
from camera view at the ceiling/wall of cabin left. Place one at each
seating cluster (assuming two clusters of seats) so you don't get
light fall-off going towards the front of the cabin.
Honestly, though, if it was me... I'd try to do the entire cabin shoot
with the cabin lighting (inside darkened hanger) and supplement with
artificial lighting only as necessary.
Well, duh, don't we have an expert airplane photographer right here on
this list????
--
Ken Norton
ken@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.zone-10.com
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