But back to the shoot....Upon checking out the place i met with the owner, whom I may have met on a random previous occurrence, gave me the green light.The venue seems to be even more challenging than I had imagined.I haven't officially accepted to do the shoot and quite honestly made my buddy aware of my experience and skill level. Not once did I say I was a professional photog, or ask to do the event. He mentioned it'd be a super great start, no one is concerned with A-Level shots, and I would get a foot, two shoes and an elbow in the door to getting more similar work.The scene is a low ceiling room roughly 45 feet by 60 feet. Stained cherry wood ceiling, recessed lights towards the perimetry, yellow (ughh) walls with framed b/w pictures 18x30 spaced about 3 ft apart on two walls. Booth tables form the three walls, and those lil red glass candles will atop each table. The owner dimmed the lit to where he anticipated they'd be, pointed out main and secondary entry points, where the drink staff will be entering and where the band will be performing.Bouncing of cieling no go. The walls pose a major challenge with all the pictures, as the glass will reflect way differently than the ugly yellow walls. I did some testing at home, yea I know not nearly the same at all, but to get an idea of what I'm looking at in terms of the low light levels. Trying to preserve ambient background light will be difficult to say the least. What I'm mostly worried about is since it'll be so dim, the flash is gonna be super annoying as everyone's eyes will be adjusted for such low light and every time the flash fires it'll seem like there's a lightning storm in the room.I'm thinking about making more foam board reflectors to bounce off of and have them double as shields for those facing the flash directly.Flame suit on n buttoned up tight,