For many of you, getting a good photo of an eBay item using a DIY Macro Studio should be old news. I know I've talked about it before. So why do I have a Part II? Because I found a lighting scheme that seems to work pretty well (and only requires one flash or lamp) and also wanted to put in more details about the post processing. Don't worry though, this post will have less words and more pictures than the last few.
So, the task: to get some good pictures of my Nikon SB-20 for an upcoming post. Since I was already taking some eBay pictures of a video card, I used the same set up, but the first picture came out dark and I was momentarily confused. Then I realized that by taking a picture of my SB-20, I couldn't use the SB-20. Duh.
In fact, the way I set it up, there is a ring light effect: the flash hits the near copy paper (diffusing through it), hits the far box flap (covered in copy paper, see at trend yet?), and also spills onto both the top and bottom of the box entrance. The result is pretty even lighting from all around the entrance of the box. The balance between the two sides is controlled by moving the flash closer or farther from the box (light intensity drops with distance, but the distance between the two sides will stay the same).
Total Cost: $0 (since I have plenty of copy paper, old boxes, and scotch tape)
And remember, I used a flash, but you can use any old light source (flashlight, desk lamp, etc). If you don't use a flash, use a tripod because your exposure time will probably be pretty long. I can't remember the exact settings (and they don't matter that much) but I think it was something like F/11 and 1/4 power on my Sunpak 383 for 1/200s (flash sync speed). Really I just kept shooting (in manual mode) until my histogram was nice and spread out and I liked the balance of lighting on the flash. FYI, I used an eBay trigger for synchronization.
You know, the more digital photos I take, the more I realize that post processing can take an mediocre photo and elevate it to a good or sometimes even a great photo. But, if you have to start with something, after all, garbage in, garbage out.
The first step is obvious. Crop it to get rid of the distracting stuff.
Then, time to fix the crappy color balance. I'll be devoting a future Quick Tip to color balance, so I'll just give a quick description here. When I took the photo, I set the 350D to the "Flash" white balance. For some reason, I got a redish tint (maybe some of the box wasn't covered in paper so it polluted my white light?). It also may have been the ambient, but I doubt it. The good news is that fixing the white balance afterwards is easy. The bad news is you lose a little color detail unless you shoot in RAW mode, but for this image, it doesn't hurt the quality much.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi50sZuzOE_7yj2itrm4Eb8n65ZyATX8MBIv_F0oZOSgahDHbhyphenhyphenr3ZX5Y5xVDSXv7TrI0YvwevoiuoTfOz_6EhXGxYm-b-VwZ8O8iyicIFcuI19B8o9hRC_KyJgTksN6ko-852Huaptg7C7/s200/colorbal.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyZ9XVUj-yPednXmDccHDcG-HEkCy6ziXu6MYReTiQFtCvuXfGGnwADkgGxO_VdLoPmi12BrQNOobg5F-DVOcIcqur94Lz3skyHfFTimHikDVRkXEulCRqgvxiafzBU2Gu1TcAM10b8Xff/s200/curves.png)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZ0Edoa-O18kNKzCUDyc989mxbXX5u3K1JiDf-7Y2AKyJsfFL_UHe9v92wU0IyOAfNzthx9p1UhjzEKUu5w7rrEqbqma8EVCtDzzTCh5_1h8RVyw4WVAmx97VbB0keIQNssfoxXNFFSI_o/s200/dodge.png)
So, that's it. The main thing I wanted to demonstrate was how easy it is to use a single light source to make a quality eBay picture with a white background to make the product jump out of the page. Once you've practiced the technique a bit, it really only takes 10 minutes total to set up, take the picture, and process it.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMBwOBbXR7c_XQUV4fiiOdPY9tdhgHu5Q3IBHi0M4QLWHdDolMX8qff4z2Ey9olSnkItoQypLqtpzuM5T9xuPkLv2muD_hEG0qDIRzh10n6b77WVP0XdRW1Z0fL86hrk-Eb-iPi94IVeRU/s400/ebay.png)
[If you missed it, read Part I.]
Thanks for this useful tutorial. Finally I've got some direction where to head to.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. Glad I could help!
ReplyDelete