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High Speed Sync Photography Made Easy!
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- Опубліковано 6 сер 2024
- Learn all about high-speed sync, including what it is, how it works, and how you can use it to take stunning portraits outdoors!
Gear Used (Amazon affiliate links):
Westcott RapidBox Octa L amzn.to/3siWLs0
Westcott FJ400 Strobe amzn.to/3t7Tcnr
Westcott Universal Flash Trigger amzn.to/3JPEo3G
Westcott Bowens Speedring amzn.to/3sk6Ftu
Sony A7RIV amzn.to/36tQFfI
Sony 50mm 1.2GM amzn.to/3tNiid8
Sony Battery Grip amzn.to/2F7LuR6
Sony High-Speed SD Card amzn.to/2HjwlNh
Sandbag amzn.to/2BvyuVt
Kupo C-Stand amzn.to/2svNXlL
Kupo Roller Stand amzn.to/2HhBLZ3
Kupo Grip Head amzn.to/2EteJ3A
Kupo Boom Arm amzn.to/2BwKaHJ
Model: Katelyn Tuck
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High speed sync is a tricky topic, but hopefully this detailed video helped you out! Have any questions you want me to cover in the next video? Let me know here :)
this is literally perfect man. I'm currently using this video to train my team bcuz you explained it so much better than me 😅
I love the paper visual showing the two different curtains and then the video slow down to show how the curtains work in the real camera
OMG Miguel this complete breakdown just sheds so much light (no pun intended) on the complete explanation of what other wise has been a complete mystery for me. Thank you millions for this fantastic step by step instruction guide and your explanation at the end, also helped me understand why you wouldn't want to use it all the time... I never knew HSS only used small amounts of power, this is fantastic, thank you so so much
I started using flash outdoors and love how it can bring subject to life. Flowers really pop :) I got some learning to reduce the randomness of my results. . Thanks.
FINALLY, a video that actually explains what I feel most other flash guides are trying to.
Great video! Can’t wait to see and learn from your next video!🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
thank you! This is a really helpful and clear video that explained to me the things I didn't understand before.
Thank you for clearing the doubt, really understood it !
Very well explained. Thank you!
I’ve experimented with both and it’s very dependent on the circumstances and the lighting I’m trying to achieve. I do like using nd filters just because I think you get a little different look. Great video subject matter for sure. Thanks
Beautiful and very helpful...!!! love it...👌🏻👌🏻❤️❤️❤️
Perfectly explained. Thank you
Great video. Thank you!
Very very informative.. I actually have an outdoor shoot today (June 21).. Gonna take all of this into consideration. Thanks again
Amazing explanation! Thanks
Thanks a lot
Worth mentioning:-
1- the same light amount of the flash in normal mode equals the multiple sets of flashes in sync mode
It is like spilling the same cup of water in small amounts during longer time instead of spilling it all at once
So at any higher sync speed sensor will get some light from the flash
Now, the flash power in sync mode is much much weaker than its power in normal mode
You need to get it really close to your subject
Can't light the whole body very well without really wide open aperture and strong day light or professional stadiums, etc.
Best thing of sync mode is that creamy soft even lighting on your subject !
So delicate, romantic !!
Great explanation. Thank you.
This is insanely helpful thaks Miguel
great shots, cool vid, thanks
Super… I learn a lot. Thanks
Great video thanks !
So good. Very interesting and useful video. First time I understood hss. Thanks mate and best regards from Germany 👌
Amazing video!
Thanks for explaining HSS for the layman!
Great video! I’m just learning OCF and learning through a number of mistakes along the way 😅
Great tutorial! Thank you.
Thanks for watching! More to come soon 😎👍
Great video. Thanks for sharing ❤
Thanks for watching! More to come 📸
Needed this!
Super helpful. I'm doing my nephew 1st bday shoot this weekend. YOU'RE THE MAN!!!!
That's awesome! I hope this stuff helps you out :)
Just just got a new subscriber. Thanks man
This is a great one Professor Quiles!
Thank you!! 🙏
As a beginner to flash photography I was wondering why my images were half black at times and now I know why. This video was the key to solving my problem thank you so much ☺!!!
Is that even possible with modern cameras (at least DSLR) ? Any strobe communicating with the camera will set my cameras (Canon) to the max. strobe time. And without that HSS will not work. So you would need to use some older flash which is not recognized by the camera with only the trigger pulse to fall into that hole.
Thank you very much 🙏🏽
Great explanation 🍻
This is a great insight into HSS. What needs to be done for setting this up to use HSS? How does the trigger play its role? What settings for the camera are used? Is a trigger needed or can it be connected with a cable? Thanks!
Superb explanation. Thanks Miguel.
You are welcome!
nicely done, Miguel
Hey Miguel! Great video!! Thank you!
Thanks for watching! More to come 📸
Let's go! Intro hooked me :) Thank you!
Happy to hear it!! Hope it helps 😁📸
@@MiguelQuilesJr It helps as I was using 1/125 for A9 (in studio) and from your video leaned that camera can work with 1/250 :)
Thank you 💕💕 for the video
My pleasure! Hope you enjoy it :)
Great Video!!
Thanks!
This video was brilliant Miguel. Do you happen to have a tutorial for non-HSS flash use? Or one in the plans? I'd love to share it with my community as the topic is requested very often.
thank you for the knowledge
Excellent review/tutorial. Helped me to better control my flash. I found and think Sony + Godox doesn’t work well in TTL at close distances (under 3 meters) so M power setting + bounce is the way to go. My diminutive a6500 supports HSS, nice for outdoor when not using ND filters
I also have an sony a6500:) In which directions do you use the flash in indoor places? Like for the wide shots, close ups and mid shots?
Thanks Miguel
Thx man😀
Gracias por el video✌🏽
My pleasure!! 🙌
Outstanding video! It helped me get a better understanding of using HSS. A couple of questions (1) was the flash power set to Manual and what power setting? Or was it set to TTL. (2) I use a Canon R6 with a Godox AD200 Pro I know I can set HSS on the trigger, but not sure if I need to set the camera to HSS too? Would you happen to know. Thank you so much and more power to your channel.
You the man! Thanks for this video.
Appreciate you bro! 🙏
Got some b-roll footage of you and Sal playing some corn hole at shutterfest. I need to send that to you ASAP.
You had the good angle too! If you have it to share that would be awesome.
Good Job
Great video Miguel! Love the shirt BTW
Thanks bro!!
Thanks a lot for sharing. ❤❤❤ how can I set up hss using the same flash? I appreciate your help😍
Hi, thanks for your videos, I learn each time. I have Elinchrom D-Lite which are HSS. When I switch to HSS, the bottom of my pictures are more exposed than the upper part, as if there was a dark gradient going from top to bottom. I assume that this because the upper part of the sensor receives less strobes than the bottom. But when I see you unedited raw that you present in your videos, it seems like you don't have that issue. Is there something I missed? Can we get rid of that gradient?
Great video, could you post a link to the existing ND filter video?
Tip top video
Thank you!
Thank you Miguel, any particular setting I should have on my a7iv, I am exposing to my liking, looks awesome on back of camera, but once I upload to light room images look underexposed, I have turned off dro, and turned off viewing of screen from sunny to manual and set to normal, any advice greatly appreciated thank you
Great video. Just a small observation. Shutters work the exact oposite way. They cover the sensor and when u take the shot they reveal it. Not the other way around. Other than that this can be very helpful for alot of people.
Can you please show how you set up you trigger and your flash for high speed sync? I can not find a video that explains that. Using wescott fj 400 and canon r6 and mark3?
excellent explanation 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Using ND Filters is a viable solution for daylight and doing portrait photography at night is an alternative. My apple orchard at night is a fun and a unique look.
Thanks. Now I know why my HSS shots at 1/400 were overexposed. I need to go much faster like 1/2500s+.
I think you forgot the so called supersync or HyperSync. It is a method that usually works best with slow flashes. The idea is simple: use a (mostly cheap) flash that outputs the light over a longer period in time. The longer flash duration covers the extremely short shutter speeds. Synchronisation is the problem here but it works well if the camera and the flash are synced well. Problem with HSS is the faster aging of the flash tube / capacitor.
What flash settings do you have for the last photo example that you shared?
What situations do you use high speed synch. I like to shoot with higher aperture number to grab details.
I understand better. Thank you
Hi there, I have a question about high speed sync. Let me start by saying that I've used HSS before, So I do understand how it works. However today I was doing a photoshoot and noticed an issue with the photo. I noticed that the top part was coming out a lot brighter than the button, even though I was using HSS to shoot. The shoot took placed during the day around 4pm when it was still bright but not overly sunny. The lens was using an F2.8 aperture. My plan was to use the fill flash to avoid shadows on my subjects face and using HSS so that I could use a faster shutter speed to avoid overexposing the image. With HSS both camera and flash can go as far as 1/8000 of a sec. any advise you can give me will be greatly appreciated.
I'm shooting with Canon R5 and profoto a1, I am finding the HSS function to now work at times, I suspect it's a compatibility issues. Is anyone having the same problem ?
To be clear, do you have to shoot manual mode? And what setting on the camera do you have to change for HSS? And any change to settings on the trigger?
in the video he mentions shutter speeds of 1/160-1/250 is a general flash max sync speed standard so i take that too mean if ur camera flash shutter sync speed in whatever mode is set to above the max (fastest) then your strobe will be set to shoot in HSS but if its set too under that flash sync speed(max of ur camera u have to check ur manual) like 1/125 itll shoot normal and not in HSS. So check too see what the standard flash max shutter sync speed is too know. For Nikon users they call it FP sync in the menu but for canon may be different
This was so educative. When are you dropping a Sony’s HVL- series Wireless External Flash video? Haha
Thank you! And I'll definitely release that video soon, either here or on the Sony Alpha Universe channel 😁📸
Do you have any videos on using CTO’s?
Hi Miguel. Thanks for the great video. I have a has flash, but when I go to higher speeds, I seem to get some horizontal lines all across the image. Any ideas why that might be?
Thanks
That's because HSS isn't working for some reason. Could be that your flash or trigger don't support it. What are you using?
@@MiguelQuilesJr it's a Sony a7siii with a newer has flash, i don't have it with me right now to tell you the model. Alas adding flash has also added a whole new world of confusion...
Ps
Sorry autocorrect got me: neewer HSS flash
i never thought because of a keyboard and mouse your video gets better :))) (making fun of Apple)...just kiding thank you for the video
Has anyone use HSS for on camera flash using TTL do you get inconsistent exposure? If you get consistent exposure when you shoot closer and further away from 1 meter compare to 3 meter way you still can get consistent exposure please let me know how did you achieve that (please include what gear you are using and with what flash so I can learn)
Thank you all in advance
to use hss do you need a dedicated flash or it's ok using general flash with trigger and a general flash with hss?
You need a flash and trigger that is compatible together and has HSS.
How u set up the sync u
Nice explanation but nothing on how to turn HSS on? Are the setting on the camera? The flash unit?? The trigger???
What is the maximum distance the light will work with High Speed sync of 2000 sec shooting at night for rodeo I am using a Canon 5D Mk11
Is it workable with Sony 6300 crop sensor camera? Which flash and trigger shall I use?
Absolutely! Just make sure you get the Sony version of the trigger from Westcott. Link is in the description.
I can’t afford HSS system so I use an ND filter. Are there any benefits to buying a cheap HSS flash? If so which one should I buy?
Hey Miguel, thanks for the video. I have a question about this. I’ve been using high speed sync with an xplor 600 pro and a godox v1 for a while now, and no issues ever. But I just bought a godox v860iii and even though the settings are the exact same as the v1, I get the black line across the image at any shutter speed above 1/200.
Any idea what I’m doing wrong?
My pleasure! That's a weird one. If you're using the same trigger that's compatible with HSS, then everything should be good. What camera are you using? Some Sony cameras sync at 1/160, so if you're using one of those cameras that''s likely why you're seeing the shutter curtain.
@@MiguelQuilesJr I use a Z6ii and a Z9, and the Z9 is the one that has the band with the v860iii. The Z6ii’s high speed sync works just fine with both flashes
@@kennym8713 the Z9 has no mechanical shutter. The sensor reads line by line and if there is no shutter in front that might cause the problems. Or it is just a missing firmware update for the Z9…
👍
Just got same Sony camera but got sooooo frustrated...I can't get it to hight synch with my Goodox flash😬
Why not use neutral density filters when shooting wide open instead of HSS?
Good question. I made a separate video about this, but the short answer is that ND filters can possibly introduce color casts, and depending on how strong the ND is, it can make focusing more challenging for certain cameras.
I may be wrong, but I think your explanation of the way the shutter works at higher speeds is incorrect. Consequently, so is your explanation of how HSS works. This is perhaps clearest at 6:07 where you describe the flash firing multiple times as the 1st curtain moves across the sensor. I'm pretty convinced that what you describe would actually result in a linearly varying exposure, as the very bottom of the sensor would receive only a single flash whilst the top receives multiple flashes.
My understanding is that for higher speed exposures, the two curtains move together across the sensor in a synchronised, but offset manner. Using the nomenclature on your diagram, curtain 2 is released marginally before curtain 1 (the delay between the releases being determined by the desired shutter speed). This results in the sensor being exposed sequentially, as the gap between the two curtains moves over its surface - the smaller the gap, the shorter the exposure. This method is required in order to overcome the physical speed limitations of mechanical shutters.
The pulsing HSS flash ensures that the light is effectively present through the full duration, as the slit between the curtains passes over the sensor - it sort of emulates a constant light source by means of a very fast sequence of individual flashes.
Bit tricky to explain in writing, but I hope the above makes sense and please do correct me if I'm wrong.
you're absolutely right!
@@racheljeraffi8597 Thanks Rachel. Good to know I wasn't completely off the mark ☺
That was exactly what I noticed. That the explanation of the movement of the curtains is wrong. In the example, the top of the sensor receives multiple shots of light from the flash, being overexposed. And the lower parts of the sensor are being covered as the curtain rises.
thanks a lot but is it necessary to have special trigger ....................thanks again
Yes, you have to have a trigger and light that are HSS compatible. 👍
i use the Z9 . HSS is not possible due to huge banding problems
That's wild!! Never heard of this happening with the Z9.
Weak area for me. I have the gear for sure. I just need to learn how to use it.
can I don't use High speed synce without a trigger
?
STANDARD FLASH SYNC IF SHUTTER SPEED
IS ABOVE 1/250 (IN SLOW MOTION) and HIGH SPEED SYNC IF SHUTTER SPEED
IS ABOVE 1/250 (IN SLOW MOTION).
Excuse me sir, I heard you say that you have to have a trigger and a flash capable of high speed sync. Don't you mean a trigger and a camera capable and a flash capable of high speed sync also? Like your video.
My camera won’t let me up my shutter speed. HELP
What camera are you using and what mode do you have selected (a, s, m, p)?
HSS is useful but it drains the batteries of your flash
Leica Q3 max shutter speed only 1/2000!
I use high speed sync every single time I use flash. I don't shoot less than 1/400
Where I got lost was when you said to achieve high speed sync, you will need a trigger. You didn't explain why you would need a trigger and didn't explain whether the flash had to be off the camera and why. It seems to me your explanation is for pro users who already understand enough to execute h.s.s.
You need a trigger and a flash that both support HSS in order to use the feature off-camera. On camera, only the flash needs to be compatible.
@MiguelQuilesJr Thank you for replying, Miguel, so I bought the Sony HVL-F32M for my Sony a7iv hoping to learn more about using a speedlight. According to my flash specification, it supports hss, so I won't need a trigger to use this feature given your answer. I assume.
as per your demo surerly the top of the frame will receive more paulses as the curtain progresses upwards and therefore be over exposed.your model is not working as your are trying to explain.
So no coverage of how to actually set your flash or camera settings for HSS. Cool.
There's nothing to set, it does it automatically if you have the correct trigger and lights.
Godox Xpro II and AD600 and I see black banding above 1/200
What camera?
@@MiguelQuilesJr A7 IV
There isn't a setting other than to turn on wireless flash in the menu. It sounds to me like the lights aren't going into HSS mode. Check the firmware on the light, remote, and camera body to make sure everything is up to date.
I know; me writing this is no less pathetic.
"...unlike any YT video you have seen so far..." Such "lovely" modesty.
(Most other High-speed explanations and demonstrations do not sugar coat and 'nicely' dilute at lengths with phoney compassiinate pedagogy, that is, finaly, counter productive inflating grandios, generous "sharing knowledge".
The essential takeaways are buried, but looking well presented. I'm still shocked and triggered by these massively many hidden agendas by influencers (above all : build an aura. Never mind if the followers could gain emanzipation faster by just orienting to allready existing info, or just make truly strait forward flowcharts .)
Have you seen another on UA-cam that's more comprehensive?
The title is misleading. It should be "how HSS works" . How is it made easy when you never showed us how to HSS?.
You missed it then. Re-watch the video and listen closely, I cover all of this.
I never use it. ND filters with non hss is MUCH more efficient. The cover image of this video is completely misleading. Makes no sense
Nd filters are great but can present their own issues in certain situations. I typically use them anyway over HSS myself. As for the image, it's not misleading at all and shown in the video. If you shoot wide open (f/1.2) with a strobe outdoors in that spot with the light at the lowest setting, that's what you get with normal sync speeds.
@@MiguelQuilesJr I never found an issue with nd.
Regarding the image, you would get a blown background, never the subject
Again, I showed that in the video. At 1.0 power (lowest setting) on the strobe that was the result. Nothing misleading about it.