MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
I've been reading Joe McNally's latest book, The Hot Shoe Diaries. It would be easy to criticize the book as one big Nikon (and Lastolite) commercial with all the gratuitous gear references he makes. Still, I'm really enjoying the book and learning a lot from it. It's very inspiring.
The book is a series of examples of scenes lit with one or more speedlites with a lot of discussion on the lighting effects. If you want to move beyond available light photography, this is a great book for inspiration and education.
While being very conversational in tone, it is not a beginner's book. The author assumes that you have a pretty good understanding of the basics of exposure. If you ware still unsure what will happen if you open your aperture wider, drop your exposure compensation, or increase your shutter speed, this is not the book for you. If you are an intermediate to advanced shooter that wants to see how one of the best in the business creates amazing lighting effects using nothing but speedlites, it's a great book.
One caution - this book may inspire FAS (Flash Acquisition Syndrome). While he just works with speedlites in the book, he sometimes uses several, along with stands, gels, clamps, diffusers, gobos, snoots, etc.
The book is similar to The Moment It Clicks, but with more emphasis on the process. Instead of being a glossy picture book with short descriptions, it is more instructional. It is the explanations that drive the book with the pictures there for illustration. Despite it being a big Nikon Speedlite commercial, this Canon shooter found it to be a very good book.
The Canon Speedlight system can do almost everything he discusses in the book. The systems seem very similar once you get passed the terminology differences (i-TTL vs E-TTL II). The only two differences that jumped out at me are Nikon's ability to use a built-in flash as a commander (about the only use non-emergency use for a built-in flash) and the SB-900's ability to zoom to a much tighter (200mm equiv) coverage area.
The book is a series of examples of scenes lit with one or more speedlites with a lot of discussion on the lighting effects. If you want to move beyond available light photography, this is a great book for inspiration and education.
While being very conversational in tone, it is not a beginner's book. The author assumes that you have a pretty good understanding of the basics of exposure. If you ware still unsure what will happen if you open your aperture wider, drop your exposure compensation, or increase your shutter speed, this is not the book for you. If you are an intermediate to advanced shooter that wants to see how one of the best in the business creates amazing lighting effects using nothing but speedlites, it's a great book.
One caution - this book may inspire FAS (Flash Acquisition Syndrome). While he just works with speedlites in the book, he sometimes uses several, along with stands, gels, clamps, diffusers, gobos, snoots, etc.
The book is similar to The Moment It Clicks, but with more emphasis on the process. Instead of being a glossy picture book with short descriptions, it is more instructional. It is the explanations that drive the book with the pictures there for illustration. Despite it being a big Nikon Speedlite commercial, this Canon shooter found it to be a very good book.
The Canon Speedlight system can do almost everything he discusses in the book. The systems seem very similar once you get passed the terminology differences (i-TTL vs E-TTL II). The only two differences that jumped out at me are Nikon's ability to use a built-in flash as a commander (about the only use non-emergency use for a built-in flash) and the SB-900's ability to zoom to a much tighter (200mm equiv) coverage area.