[Canon RF] Confused about Lens selection!!

Started by BB13, January 23, 2025, 09:26:04 PM

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Monster


BB13

Quote from: DeepakS on January 27, 2025, 07:02:44 AMA word of advice: if you are really interested in learning about flash, get online and find resources that teach you the whole thing systematically. Here, before you learn the basics, answers from different responders, will only confuse you.
Can you please suggest any YT video series or any website, resources etc if you have any.

Ajay Garg

Quote from: bb_13 on January 24, 2025, 11:14:45 PMOfficial Canon adapter is 7-8k I saw one guy selling no-brand adapter for 4k, that would be good option or I should opt for branded only?

I would recommend a branded one for peace of mind, and if you are planning to use the adapter for a long time.

DeepakS


Camera flashes have several modes, most of which control exactly when it pops off - earlier or later in the exposure giving the picture a very specific effect. These effects are not the glitzy glam sort but meant to exert control on the look of the image.

In all modes including manual, the flash will sync with the shutter release. Most of the modes take some input from the camera - the ambient light detected, shutter speed etc before giving the flash the signal to pop. All have some degree of automation. Of them "manual mode" allows most control by the user re the amount of power (read brightness) & spread, of the flash.

External flashes work much better than on-camera pop up flashes. Which is why pop-up flashes exist only on cheaper entry/intermediate level camera bodies. You will not see them on higher end camera bodies.  

A word of advice: if you are really interested in learning about flash, get online and find resources that teach you the whole thing systematically. Here, before you learn the basics, answers from different responders, will only confuse you.

Nishit Dave

Manual mode means you decide the power output of the flash (and the zoom setting if it has the feature). It does not do TTL exposure adjustment in this mode.

This mode works well in macro photography, especially if one is photographing a skittish insect that might fly off with the pre-flash that's required for TTL. Manual gives you accurate control on flash power.

https://fstoppers.com/gear/dont-be-afraid-use-ttl-flash-use-it-correct-way-best-results-618710

BB13

Quote from: DeepakS on January 25, 2025, 12:41:29 PMIt depends. For most budget flashes, if you set your flash to manual mode in low power and the batteries are fresh, you may get 2/3 shots in a burst before the flash switches off to recycle. Practically that means that in a burst of 5 shots, the first 2 may be lit by flash and the balance 3, not. Generally speaking, you cannot reliably depend upon a cheap flash to support burst mode.

Manual mode as in? The flash will sync with camera right or I am misunderstanding something here, won't the external flash will work similar to on-camera pop-up flash?

DeepakS

Quote from: bb_13 on January 24, 2025, 11:09:37 PMAlso, for fast moving subjects like kids, flash photography will work where I need to take couple of photos in burst mode to get a perfect shot?
It depends. For most budget flashes, if you set your flash to manual mode in low power and the batteries are fresh, you may get 2/3 shots in a burst before the flash switches off to recycle. Practically that means that in a burst of 5 shots, the first 2 may be lit by flash and the balance 3, not. Generally speaking, you cannot reliably depend upon a cheap flash to support burst mode.



BB13

Quote from: Nishit Dave on January 24, 2025, 12:49:11 PMGet a stabilised EF-S lens and use it with the official Canon mount adapter. A flash would be very helpful for indoor photography, but direct flashes look awful. As others have suggested, you can use a light modifier or bounce flashes off the ceiling (doesn't work with black ceilings in restaurants and coloured ceilings can cause a colour cast).

You can also buy a cheap manual flash and learn to use it through trial and error instead of buying a costlier TTL flash.

Official Canon adapter is 7-8k I saw one guy selling no-brand adapter for 4k, that would be good option or I should opt for branded only?

BB13

#8
Thanks guys for your valuable inputs, I would definitely try to learn about flash photography, never tried TBH. I tired with inbuilt pop-up flash but it looks very harsh, similar to flash photography on smartphone, I think I would probably need external flash. What would be some entry level options compatible with Canon R10? I looked up some options on Amazon but most low budget flashes mention compatible with multiple cameras (Nikon, Canon, Fuji etc. for e.g. this one from Godox)

Do these flash works fully compatible with Canon R10 or there is some catch?

Also, for fast moving subjects like kids, flash photography will work where I need to take couple of photos in burst mode to get a perfect shot?

Nishit Dave

Get a stabilised EF-S lens and use it with the official Canon mount adapter. A flash would be very helpful for indoor photography, but direct flashes look awful. As others have suggested, you can use a light modifier or bounce flashes off the ceiling (doesn't work with black ceilings in restaurants and coloured ceilings can cause a colour cast).

You can also buy a cheap manual flash and learn to use it through trial and error instead of buying a costlier TTL flash.