Wedding photographers like capturing events in the most out-of-the-ordinary settings, such as outdoor ceremonies, sunset family portraits, or even the most interesting town buildings. 

A Perfect Space Indoor setting may also lend a special touch to wedding images, but they are sometimes too cramped, too dim, or all three for comfort during the reception. Still, you can make beautiful images under challenging conditions. 

This blog post will provide tips to help you take better photographs of indoor weddings, regardless of the lighting conditions, including how to locate natural light sources and make beautiful silhouettes.

1. Ambient Exposure

Adjusting the exposure to highlight the ambient light of the wedding room is the initial step in capturing excellent inside photographs on the wedding day. Therefore, you should adjust your ISO, shutter speed, and aperture to photograph the location’s ambiance while preserving the natural light for which couples often pay a pretty penny.

Blue or purple is typically used for uplighting because it looks good on human skin. Keep the shutter speed below this speed sync to prevent your flashes from entering the hyper sync mode (hss). 

2. Adjust Your Flash So That It Syncs With The Second Curtain (or Rear Curtain Sync)

By synchronizing the shutter with the second curtain, we can catch more light and freeze action at slower shutter speeds. With it, you can take pictures with shutter settings as slow as 1/60 of a second and sometimes even drag the shutters at 1/15 of a second for extra creative control.

It’s recommended that you practice dragging the shutter at home before attempting to do so during a live event. Do yourself a favor and only attempt dragging it during crucial times of the day. Clients will not be pleased if you flub important shots. The after-dinner party is excellent for testing and refining novel lighting arrangements.

3. Bring Some Light To Add Flavor

When shooting inside, you’ll usually need anywhere from one to three-speed lights (two of which should be off-camera flash), but we’ll just be discussing the primary light here (or about the on-camera flash). Only use the automatic mode if you’re shooting in low light and don’t have time to snap a test picture in manual mode to adjust the flash strength.

4. Refrain From Erasing Images

You might be doing this out of routine, or because modern cameras enable you to quickly and easily erase photos you don’t like. It comes with the risk of discarding photos that may not have yet to live up to your expectations while in-camera but had great potential for being transformed into masterpieces in post-processing. 

You never know which ones you’ll find useful in Lightroom or Photoshop if you hold on to them and review them at a later date.

5. Be Creative

Silhouettes are a great way to inject creativity into your indoor wedding photography and give the happy couple more options for wedding images. You may add variety to your couple’s wedding photos by taking some from above, below, wide-angle, and close-up. Silhouettes require shooting against the light and paying close attention to contours.

Conclusion

Photos taken in nature are certain to be breathtaking, but indoor photography allows you just as much artistic freedom. Making the most of available light is essential for getting great shots of interior scenes.

It takes a lifetime of practice to become proficient in flash photography, but the benefits are tremendous once you reach that level. Even though the lighting conditions in which you are photography are less than perfect, you may still utilize the advice given above as a guide, along with your artistic spark.