do I really need an off camera flash?

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Timmy
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So...payday on Friday and I'm looking to spend £100 on a Nissin Di622.
But the question is do I really need one? As in..I like to shoot long exposures in the dark and also outside-y stuff like beaches, landscapes etc. to which I never use the onboard flash.
Photographing people doesn't really interest me too much and I don't particularly enjoy shooting indoors but with the winter coming up and it getting cold, getting outdoors may be an issue.
If I buy the Nissin I'm going to buy a Raynox DCR-250 as well so having an off camera flash in that situation is obv. required.

If I don't buy a Nissin I'll probably get a Tamron 17-50 2.8 to replace my Nikon 18-70mm
 
sounds like you just want to spend money/collect equipment!
 
sounds like you just want to spend money/collect equipment!

thank you, I wasn't really looking to justify whether I need to spend the money or not :bang: but if you want to look at it from that angle - I want to buy a new piece of equipment for my hobby from some spare money I have - with the money I have available (£250 max) would an off camera flash be a useful addition to my camera bag so I can take my hobby further.
Basically - how often and in what situations can an off camera flash be useful? in daylight outside? indoors? close up? long way away? flash n00b here
 
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It's very useful to me - no idea if it will be useful to you! What sort of pictures do you take?
 
Get the flash. It will expand your photography in all sorts of new ways - if you learn to use it properly. Combined with the Raynox is a brilliant idea - that's two completely new avenues to explore.

Get that new lens and you'll hardly notice any difference at all.
 
Get the flash. It will expand your photography in all sorts of new ways - if you learn to use it properly. Combined with the Raynox is a brilliant idea - that's two completely new avenues to explore.

Get that new lens and you'll hardly notice any difference at all.

thank you hoppy lol..I think its just monday morning and having 2 hours sleep last night so not explaining myself properly :thumbsdown: but yea basically thats what I was looking for..will the flash allow me to learn new things and open new avenues. Cheers. And thankyou Awp too :thumbs:
 
We musta been thinking about the same kinda thing, I replaced my kit lens 17-85mm with a 28-75mm 2.8 last week and have just bought my first off camera flash!! :) Like you I am mostly into landscapes seascapes but I am hoping the off camera flash will allow me to be more creative with portraits and also will be handy for a touch of macro.
 
What tripod do you have?

Based on what you curently do I would say if you don't already have one, a decent tripod and head would be better use of your money. If you do have one, ignore me!
 
I had the opportunity to get an SB600 due to a raffle, never thought of buying one before but now I wouldn't be without one.
 
What tripod do you have?

Based on what you curently do I would say if you don't already have one, a decent tripod and head would be better use of your money. If you do have one, ignore me!

can't remember what it is, its decent enough for me at the moment and I certainly don't find it lacking.

Thanks for the info and reassurance guys, guess the Nissin is the way to go :thumbs:
 
But the question is do I really need one? As in..I like to shoot long exposures in the dark and also outside-y stuff like beaches, landscapes etc. to which I never use the onboard flash.

Looks to me as though the answer is in the question - if this is your interest when are you likely to use one:thinking:

Simon
 
If it were me, I would just collect money rather than photo things.
Then have it available to spend when I actually need something particular.
I have always worked that way.
That way I always have enough spare cash to get literally any stuff I want, when I want it.

If you just buy stuff, you will end up with a lot of things you never use. and not enough money to get what you need.
 
I'd vote get one, for the money even if you only use it a few times to get a shot you couldnt have done previosuly.

Also you say you like long exposures, so practice using some off camera flash during a long exposure to pick things out in the photo and try some funky effects.

As you say also, with the winter rolling in, buy yourself a light tent and get doing some macros inside in the warm, although you may find you need more than 1 flashgun for that.
 
God I'm gonna get in trouble here...

Yep the Di622 is a great gun, got one myself and shooting indoors all the time and doing portraits, its essential.
But before I had it, and when I was playing with macro, I never had a flash gun, I used two little cheap mains powered LED lamps from argos, cost me under £20 the pair, have clips on them so fit anywhere and work a treat for lighting up spiders, bugs, flowers etc.
Yes you dont get the illumination you do from a bounced flash, nor do you have the ability to use them for portraits, but back then they worked fine for me and I still use them now.

This was done all with the LED lamps, + I added a small led lamp as an uplighter on the shadow side.
1 lamp hard left on the subject, 1 hard right on the wall behind, little red LED head lamp underneath on R/h side.

(Please forgive the banding, bad reduction in resolution on PB)

SH4800pix.jpg


And this is bounced flash from the Di622, flash bounced of ceiling, subject around 1 metre away.(heavily cropped)

watchoolookinat-1.jpg
 
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I would say go for it, it is not a huge ammount of money for a good spec flash.

If you are looking to try new areas of photography then OCF is a great area to look at.
 
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