ummm…thanks "Kk", but I was looking for stuff like, any special flashes, equiptment like those refective disks, ect….
You’re not saying much ** at all ** other than "outdoor senior photography".
What kind of day is it? Cloudy day? Sunny day? Help me here.
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Flash? Not usually for outdoor, if you scout your location correctly. You could use a reflector (if it’s needed to illuminate the subject). But the most important thing is your photography skills.
Taken today. No equipment except the camera.

You’re not saying much ** at all ** other than "outdoor senior photography".
What kind of day is it? Cloudy day? Sunny day? Help me here.
———–
Flash? Not usually for outdoor, if you scout your location correctly. You could use a reflector (if it’s needed to illuminate the subject). But the most important thing is your photography skills.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/little_pooky/3579137419/
Taken today. No equipment except the camera.
References :
nothing really, a nice day and your camera
References :
At a minimum, a medium telephoto lens, preferably a top notch zoom, say a 70-200 f2.8, a decent camera with at least 6mp, an off camera flash to provide some fill light if needed (catch lights in the eyes are nice), a 36"-42" reflector to help control your ambient light or bounce some flash, a large diffuser panel would be really nice but isn’t necessary, and finally a decent location with open shade and a not too busy background such as the shaded side of a building or a shaded treeline.
Although you could use your camera’s meter to read a gray card, I’d suggest an incident meter with ambient and flash capabilities. It’ll make reading the light much easier.
You really only need whatever you feel you need to control the light on your subject and background. I simply listed some suggested items.
References :
15 years experience