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Still-Life Tabletop
Photography Made Easy!
Author : Roger Lewis
When it comes
to simple basic Still-Life Tabletop
Photography, as far as the novice 'wanna-be-photographer'
is concerned there is often a mental block,
when really it's quite simple, so much so
that if you start to do it professionally,
after a few years the trick is to stay
awake.
I asked UK
photographer Phil Selfe why he sold his very
successful studios a few years back and he
answered, "I just got bored Rog".
I remember
when he was my assistant back in the
seventies, I would set up the first
still-life shot, then say to him, "Shoot off
the rest Phil" and go out for the rest of
the day.
Of course not
all still-life is so mundane and in fact
some still-life shots are very exacting,
requiring careful planning, construction of
the set and attention to lighting details,
which would include running test shots to
acquire the effect that was needed.
Sometimes this could take a day or two to
successfully complete.
If you were
shooting room sets as I use to do some time
back, this would require a lot more work and
would involve the use of many assistants,
carpenters for set building and in many
cases taking days to successfully complete.
You would also need some serious studio
space to accomplish this type of specialist
work, as I use to have.
But as UK
comedian Ronnie Corbett would say "I
digress", lets get back to the basics of
still-life tabletop photography.
For lighting
you will need an attachment to your studio
flash unit called a 'Soft Box'. This is as
it sounds, a box constructed in fabric,
which is reflective on the inside, with a
diffuse panel at the front, providing a
directional soft defused light to illuminate
the subject. An umbrella attachment is not
sutible for this work as the spread of light
is to wide.
If you don't
have a studio flash unit you can buy a soft
box that will attach to a hammer head flash
gun. If you have a second flash head you can
put this to good use by simply bouncing it
off the ceiling, to help fill any shadow
area.
What you will
need for Still-Life Tabletop Photography.:
1. Medium
Format Camera and a 'macro' lens (close
focusing). Better still a 5x4inch. View
camera, which has tilt and swing front and
rear panels for ease of focusing.
Did you know
that only one in fifteen NEW cameras sold to
day, are film cameras, this means there are
great bargains to be had in the use film
camera market, take advantage of that right
now.
2. Soft Box
Attachment.
3. Tripod, a
good solid one.
4. Lighting
Stands, you will need two or three.
5. White Card
as reflectors or as a background, size
1mtr.x70cm. from your art shop, get three.
6.
Background. muslin or material, off white or
neutral in color.
7. Low table
about 2ftx2ft. 18 inches high.
8. Light
Meter for flash exposures.
What to do:
Set up your
soft box at an angle of 45 degrees to the
left or right of camera and slightly to the
back of the set. This should be for small
still-life objects and the light should be
no more than a meter away from the subject,
so you are able to stop down, (set the lens
aperture), to at least f22, to get as much
depth-of-field as possible so the image will
be in sharp focus. If you have a second
flash head, use it bounced off the ceiling
to help to fill any shadow area.
Fix your
reflector, (white card), the opposite side
to the flash and an additional reflector the
other side underneath the soft box.
Use a good
lens hood, such as a bellows lens hood, to
keep the light from the soft box hitting the
lens. It's also good practice to fix a small
piece of black card, suspended over the lens
of the camera to prevent any light causing
flare from the lens, taking care that the
black card doesn't clip the picture area, or
effect you meter reading.
Make test
exposures to find out the best result and
after some experimentation, you will find
the results that you want. It's also good to
"bracket" your exposures, which means to
make three exposures, one at half a stop, (f.stop
number), above the reading and one at half a
stop below, choosing the best density of the
three exposures made. Most pro
photographers, even after a tests, use this
as standard practice. Film is cheap and
digital is nothing.
Now if you
think that there is some other 'magic'
formula that the pros use to shoot simple
still life, your WRONG. This is the most
used pro photo still-life set up, but of
course there many exceptions to the rule and
not all still life work is table top.
Final
comment: The best way to become an
accomplished photographer in still-life or
other work, is go work for one as an
assistant. It's the way most good pro
photographers make it.
Happy
shooting.
To check out
the story and images about Still-Life
Tabletop Photography go here:
Still-Life Tabletop Photography
I'm from
London. I started out in the days of the
Swinging Sixties and London was quite a
place to be. In those days we use to shoot
catalog fashion shots with a 10x8 inch View
camera, so the color transparency images
would be the same size as the image on the
catalog page, I have to tell you right now
that took quite some doing. Now I spent most
of my time with my website:
Pro SECRETS of Money Making PHOTOGRAPHY,
writing about and teaching photography,
occasionally shooting assignments.
To check out
more info about Still-Life Photography, go
here:
Pro Still Life PHOTOGRAPHY
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