Saturday, 25 June 2011

Working to a photo imaging brief


I will use a calander to for my photo brief

A3 Wall Calendar with calendar template

I plan to use 12 of my photos to produce a calender

I have decided to use Bob Books because of the simple way you drag your photos in the spaces for each page and month of calander  , and the software in the set up gives me the option to fine tune images and  frame and position them within the layout.



There calendars are made to a very high standard. Printed on 200gsm semi-gloss paper

Prices range from a a4 slim 13 x29.7 cm calender at 7.99
to a A3 portrait at £ 29.99

Prices do  include VAT

With postage and packaging at £3 pound
the total price for a A3 portrait  calander would b2 £32.99



There is also other photo calanders availble from diffenrnet web ites





Depending what you want and the quality and size of your calander you can get some great offers on the web



I will also use college printer to enable me to fully complete the criteria of calibration etc of local printers.


Friday, 24 June 2011

Final 10 products

 
Final 10 products
Theme water













final 10 portraits



Final 10 portraits



 













final cuts for products

I have took all my water themed products
at home using basic lights


Here is the final selection of options for my final 10

Shortlist for final 10 Portraits

I have took quite a few portraits now
and here is the shortlist for my final 10








Tuesday, 21 June 2011



As i was researching John Brackenbury studio product work i decided to try and copy one of her photos i decided to try to take a photo of a water droplet simliler to his



Origanl image of a john Brackenbury water droplet

This image is great

The  Equipment i used for my water droplet was

A old fish tank
Canon 450 d
lens 60mm macro lens
Fish tank
336 vm mini studio flash to light up the background blue card
208 wide angle slave flash to help light the water
Flash gun to light the water droplets
Food dye in water and in bag hanging down

Canon450d
Lens 60mm
Shutter speed 1/200 sec
Aperture f/5.6
Metering Evualtive
Flash
Canon450d
Lens 60mm
Shutter speed 1/80 sec
Aperture f/5.6
Metering Evualtive
Flash


Canon 450d
Lens 60mm
Shutter speed 1/200 sec
Aperture f/5.6
Metering Evualtive
Flash

Canon450d
Lens 60mm
Shutter speed 1/200 sec
Aperture f/5.6
Metering Evualtive
Flash

Conclusion

I had 3 shoots and trying water droplets and with pratice i think i impoved my techniqie to quite a good standard of water droplet








Friday, 17 June 2011

Alex kolsokov

Alex kolsokov



As i was researching Alex kolsokov studio product work i decided to try and copy one of her photos the
one of the bottle in the water



orignal images

These shots where recreated with him and hes wife helping with the water
I tyre somthing similar useing the same methord and experiment with differnet teqnices


This it here video on how the shots above where taken








         This is the final image orignal image from alex kolsokov

The idea is to use water as a ultimate background is to emphasize the product: water can be transparent or 100% reflective, when you see the water surface at relatively sharp angle, it become almost 100% reflective, acting as a mirror.

Now, if we'll disturb the water surface so it will form a waves, some part of the wave will be a mirror-like, and some will be transparent, allowing light to be transmitted. Lighting setup for water splash photography:

                                                                         The set up


He has used a gray backdrop behind the tank because gray can be easily darkened or highlighted. The floor under the tank is white, aslo used as a additional reflector.

There are two lights from the top: one, more intense (1600WS full power) 10 degrees spot to be reflected from the surface (follow the dot line), 20 degrees spot to highlight a background visible through the tank.

Two spot lights were used to highlight the object, one from the front-top, shown on the schema drawing. the second was from the right behind....






I had a similer set up with 4 light

I used two 336v AC Studio flashes one was above to light up the bubbles
The seconed one was from be hide the bottle


I also used two 208W AC Slave Flash Wide Angle AC Slave Flash
One i used a yellow filter to help to bring out the yellow in the bottle
This was postioned in front of the bottle
I also used the other slave flash above to help with lighting the bottle


The first two shots are early attempts to capture the method


Canon 450d
Lens 60mm
Shutter speed 1/80 sec
Aperture f/20
ISO 100
Metering Evaluative


Add caption



















Comparison


Original image and one of my images using the same method apart from i used a blue backdrop
and alex used a filter to light up hes backgrounds for hes two tone look


original image

My image

Conclusion

I was quite happy i captured some quite good effects in the water
With some work in photoshop i think i could improve the image also