[meteorite-list] Re: THE ART OF PHOTOGRAPHING Pictures 101
From: Dave Freeman mjwy <dfreeman_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue May 24 17:47:12 2005 Message-ID: <4293A0E3.70607_at_fascination.com> Thank you very much, I will save this one for future reference..come this fall. Best, Dave F. thornysahuaro wrote: >--- Dave Freeman mjwy <dfreeman_at_fascination.com> wrote: > > > >>Dear Tom, List; >>Here we go. Get a dark (black felt) non reflective cloth square >>maybe >> >> > >Tom, Dave, and List; >Over the last several years I have been taking lots of photos of >various mineral specimens and a few meteorites I would like to pass >along some of what I have learned. >*Background color makes a difference in attracting buyers on Ebay. >*A poor photo is worse than no photo. >*Unless you have perfect supermodel's hands keep your thumbs out of >the picture. >My photo studio is a heavy cardboard box about 2 foot square with the >top and front cut out. My background is a swath of fabric draped >inside the box and held in place with cloths pins. I went to several >fabric stores and bought one yard each of fabric in various shades of >the primary colors plus black and Gray. My lighting is two 150W >halogen work lights clamped to the top sides of the box. I don't >remember the wavelength but somewhere I read that halogen light is >good for color photography. It works for me and I can't imagine >waiting for outside light conditions to be just right. I bought my >lights from The Home Depot for about $10.00 each and they come with a >sturdy clamp and pivoting head for adjusting the angle. Two lights >eliminate the shadow but still allow for depth. The concave >shapeless area with drapes and folds from the cloth in the box draws >the eye of the viewer to stone in the center. By putting a small >stand under the stone you can make it appear to float on air against >the background. Experimenting with this set up, I have found that >different color backgrounds will bring out patterns and details in >the subject stone. The background cloth reflects it's color onto the >subject just enough to enhance the contrast and bring out the detail. > This is the most dramatic in material with highly reflective areas >adjoining duller areas, like metal flakes in meteorites. >By experimenting with a variety of different color cloths and moving >the lighting around you can take a lot of pictures and get that one >that really sets off your subject. >Ebay buyers are drawn in by the gallery picture. If that half inch >square picture in the left hand column doesn't grab their attention >they may go right past your auction. Make that picture stand out. >My limited experience is that bright red or bright blue backgrounds >work. >When you are done just fold up your fabric, unplug your lights and >store everything in the box. >Art Brasher > >__________________________________________________ >Do You Yahoo!? >Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around >http://mail.yahoo.com > > > > Received on Tue 24 May 2005 05:47:15 PM PDT |
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