I spend some time at the Canadian Gun Nutz site. I am disgusted with some of the
photographs of the guns. Some guys are fantastic. Some pretty good.
Most don't seem to know more than how to zoom and click. Once in a
while I add to posts on how to take a decent picture. I'm not talking
magazine cover pictures but decent well lit simple but attractive
pictures.
One person had a pretty special gun and posted some
pictures of it. On camera flash typically looks like crap for these
kind of picture (actually most pictures). At some point he listened to
someone and used
another light source other than the on camera flash. I usually tell
people to use natural light if possible (not direct sun light) and a
tripod. Well back to the special gun. Like I said he turned off the on
camera flash of his point & shoot camera. He used a lamp to light
the gun. The following is one of the posted pictures.
Pretty bad but much better than some. At least its not badly out of focus. So I had to reply to his post. I wrote the following.
Remember that these are gun guys. I didn't want to suggest
anything too fancy. The simpler the better. (that's why I typically
suggest an overcast day or a north facing window) Well since I gave the
advice I felt I had to show the results that you can obtain. One
requirement was that I use a P&S camera. I want to show these guys
you don't need special equipment.
Earlier this evening prproulx posted some pictures of a
gorgeous 1964 Colt .38 Super. Beautiful gun. The pictures were clear
but the lighting could have been a little better. I gave him some
suggestions for future photos. Afterwards I decided to follow my own
advice and this is the result.
I wanted to keep it low tech. Anyone should be able to do this. I
didn't have any wax paper like I suggested. I was going to cut up a big
white plastic "The Bay" bag but I was still using it so I looked for
something else. I'm not sure what it was from but it is like those
tough white shipping envelopes that you can't tear open. This was the
same kind of stuff but thinner. It actually did tear when I was
stapling it (I was trying to stretch it).
The wood was some thin strips of :confused: something. Again some stuff I had laying around but I'm not sure why. :)
The
lamps are a couple of 75 watt reflector bulbs. Regular bulbs would have
worked as well but I had these so why not use them. Since I had two
therefore I used two. One would also have worked but you would get half
the light.
Ok, so I stapled the paper like sheet onto the wood strips. Kind of
fragile but who cares. We are not going to use it as a kite. Then to
hold it up I grabbed four pop bottles. I filled them with water to give
them some weight, and placed the diffuser on the bottles so it was
about a foot above the kitchen counter.
I then got a thin chunk of plywood and placed some burlap material on
it. I used a couple of vegetable cans on the far end to get it to slope
up at the rear. I then placed the gun on the burlap under the diffuser.
Now
the diffuser is no good without lights to diffuse. I had the lights but
I needed something to hold them above the diffuser. One more time to
the basement. I grabbed my workmate and a 2x3 and then back up to the
kitchen. I put the workmate at the end of the counter and slid in the
2x3. I then clamped on the two lights. This is the result.
As you can see I have my P&S camera (Canon A570) on a tripod. The
tripod cost me more than that camera. Any cheap tripod would do but I
used what I had. Normally I would have done this on the floor of the
living room rather than the kitchen counter. You need a tall tripod
when you are starting higher up. I stood on a bar stool and was up
against the ceiling to get the above shot.
So the one thing that
I didn't do was set my point & shoot camera for the tungsten
(incandescent) setting. This caused the pictures of the gun to be more
yellow than they are in reality but it doesn't look that bad as it is.
It helps for me to be partially color blind.
I used my new point and shoot camera. The digital SLR was only used to take a picture of the setup above.
Since
I didn't dismantle the setup I went back and set the camera to tungsten
(bulb) setting for the color balance with the results below.