So from what I read on the comment, you must remember to use the flash indirectly, pointing to the ceil instead your subject, especially when you have nice white ceil and walls 🙂
I just need one camera for my work, and this is actually a D300, that I plan to change for a D300s when it will fail, but seems it’s totally indestructible! I use it since 4 years now, it’s totally dependable and nearly every shoot is perfect.
And I have another camera for everyday’s photography (maybe the most important part for me), it happens this is a X100s, but that’s not that important. What does matter is that I know it more each and every day, and use it more and more efficiently, and nearly every shoot is perfect too.
It’s fun to have so much camera, but I didn’t understand the point…
I think you’d better focus on one, or maybe two great cameras, to know them, to be able to take the most of them…

Started out doing photography at the age of 6 using an uncle's old 1940 kodak brownie box camera. At 15 years of age, I decided to buy my very own 1975 Praktica SLR camera. I now shoot with a Nikon D850. I do unpaid TFP and commercial paid work.