Showing posts with label still life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label still life. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Paper and Jewelry - 1




One more Jewelry set from my friend Hiroko Ebizaki 

who brought the pieces and styled the set.  We wanted to use  different papers solid colors (this post) , or paper using an old paintings pattern  to create different atmospheres but using the same jewelry (next week!)


The light set up is what I have been using for my most recent studio jewelry shots.  Diffuser on top (but next time I want to try an open bulb) and a gridded hard light at the back. Ring flash as main fill  and cards as needed. Some selected colors editing  upping saturation and luminescence and some limited dodging and burning.

 

Saturday, November 14, 2020

It's a Fine Line

 I had the opportunity to shoot a line of fancy skin care products list for Fine Line .   These are the results. 

I kept post production to a minimum and tried to get a mix of interesting catalog shots and a few more splashy 'hero' shots, where I played with the bottles as if they were skyscrapers.  The one with the incense smoke was a superposition of a few different images.  Keep your windows open before before the studio gets too smokey :).






Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Diamonds are a photographer's best friend.

 





Yes it has been a while. I recently had the chance to shoot a large jewelry collection, ranging from antiques to gaudy 70ies gold bracelets.  I had not had the opportunity to shoot tiny objects with excessive amount of reflections before so I was excited.  I had to shoot many pieces  in a short time, but I wanted to experiment  and get a few interesting images rather than  the usual clean on white background images for a catalog. 


So I went for a  simple geometric background  and relied on contrast, shadows and bold colors  to highlight the details. I wanted to highlight the 'substance' of these not so subtle pieces.  So I used:

- black plexiglass

-white marble slab samples (from a bathroom remodeling project!)

- dark grey paper background

 I also went for a macro lens, a  stabilized Canon 100mm f2.8 which was super fun to use. I even used it handheld for a few shots (I know I know)  and  images were still quite sharp. 

Set up: One softbox on top and a gridded strobe 1-2  stop down and behind the object, opposite to camera. (remember: the further  away this light is  the harder the shadows will be)   Just remember that  with a macro lens depth of field is truly  minuscule so dial up your flashes, close down  the aperture to  f20+ and beware of glare. Minimal post processing, but make sure to clean up your set from dust!