PoohJen
<font color=green>Willing to share a Mickey Bar?<b
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2004
- Messages
- 3,045
Hi All,
Just got back from a 2 day conference, about 150 people in the audience with panel speakers sitting up on stage. My company had a professional photographer there the whole time. It seemed to me that I noticed the photographer every time she snapped a picture. Not just the clicking, but the bright flash on every shot. She shot both the speakers and the audience.
I was curious as to why she used a flash. It was typical indoor lighting, not dim. Do professionals in this type setting always use a flash? I thought a manual, flashless setting would've been less intrusive, far less noticeable.
I guess at weddings (esp receptions) photographers usually use a flash, but those are usually posed shots in a dim dance hall. So...just wondering.

Just got back from a 2 day conference, about 150 people in the audience with panel speakers sitting up on stage. My company had a professional photographer there the whole time. It seemed to me that I noticed the photographer every time she snapped a picture. Not just the clicking, but the bright flash on every shot. She shot both the speakers and the audience.
I was curious as to why she used a flash. It was typical indoor lighting, not dim. Do professionals in this type setting always use a flash? I thought a manual, flashless setting would've been less intrusive, far less noticeable.
I guess at weddings (esp receptions) photographers usually use a flash, but those are usually posed shots in a dim dance hall. So...just wondering.

