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Made in il
Fresh-Faced New User





Israel

Greetings,
First of all, I want to appologice for my English... it's not my primery languich, so if I have some mistakes... sorry.

Since I have been painting and taking pictures of my figures, the photos was preetty crappy.
I bought a good camera (Canon 450D, Lens 18-55), but I need some tips for setup that will be able to take good SHARP pics.
Mostly I have a problem to balance bitween light, apperture and shutter speed (Have good soft two sided light above figures without any shadows) .
If you have any reccomendations for setup, I'll realy appriciat it.

B.R.
Alex
   
Made in au
Anti-Armour Swiss Guard






Newcastle, OZ

1 TRIPOD.
2. MACRO MODE (Look for the little flower).
3. READ the MANUAL (it will tell you the focus distance for this mode). This is important. Do not go closer than this.
4. Use the self-timer in addition to this mode. It should eliminate camera shake in addition (when you press the shutter button, you DO shake the camera - even just a little).

Light/aperture/shutter speed is a balance you have to learn. There is no magic all-in-one setting for all jobs. It depends a lot on the colour of the object, as well as size, details, etc. Getting this balance right is the important bit.

I'm OVER 50 (and so far over everyone's BS, too).
Old enough to know better, young enough to not give a ****.

That is not dead which can eternal lie ...

... and yet, with strange aeons, even death may die.
 
   
Made in il
Fresh-Faced New User





Israel

 chromedog wrote:
1 TRIPOD.
2. MACRO MODE (Look for the little flower).
3. READ the MANUAL (it will tell you the focus distance for this mode). This is important. Do not go closer than this.
4. Use the self-timer in addition to this mode. It should eliminate camera shake in addition (when you press the shutter button, you DO shake the camera - even just a little).

Light/aperture/shutter speed is a balance you have to learn. There is no magic all-in-one setting for all jobs. It depends a lot on the colour of the object, as well as size, details, etc. Getting this balance right is the important bit.


Many TNXs. I'll deffenetly read the manual.

PS
Slould I bay a Macro lens? Or the one that I have is enough for that?

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2013/05/25 21:42:59


 
   
Made in gb
Leader of the Sept







The canon 18-55 lens is usually enough. If you put it on manual focus and scroll right in you can get pretty good macro shots. I wouldn't buy a specific macro lens unless you wanted to use it for other things as well.

The thing to remember in macro mode is that the area of an object that is in sharp focus will be quite small, so you could, for instance, have the head in sharp focus the arms and legs may be blurred. You can prevent this to a certain extent with a very small aperture, but then you need a lot more light.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
An example of a wide aperture macro shot



And an example of a narrow aperture shot. If you click on the pictures the dakka gallery has all the camera settings I used at the bottom of the page



This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 2013/05/26 08:38:52


Please excuse any spelling errors. I use a tablet frequently and software keyboards are a pain!

Terranwing - w3;d1;l1
51st Dunedinw2;d0;l0
Cadre Coronal Afterglow w1;d0;l0 
   
Made in il
Fresh-Faced New User





Israel

 Flinty wrote:
The canon 18-55 lens is usually enough. If you put it on manual focus and scroll right in you can get pretty good macro shots. I wouldn't buy a specific macro lens unless you wanted to use it for other things as well.

The thing to remember in macro mode is that the area of an object that is in sharp focus will be quite small, so you could, for instance, have the head in sharp focus the arms and legs may be blurred. You can prevent this to a certain extent with a very small aperture, but then you need a lot more light.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
An example of a wide aperture macro shot



And an example of a narrow aperture shot. If you click on the pictures the dakka gallery has all the camera settings I used at the bottom of the page






Thank you for your answer
This is kinde of tips I was looking for.
   
 
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