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I found it to be very boring laying it flat, more fill flash to soften the shadow maybe?Regarding image 2, main problems I'm seeing:
1. Shadow of ring on background is distracting. Better to lay the ring flat.
Was a white background, was playing around with white balance, I like it. Mainly just looking for suggestions on the lighting, but thanks anyways2. The yellow background is bad. Use a white background.
Agreed, thanks3. Loss of shadow detail in the upper right portion of the ring. If the ring is the subject, you need to light it adequately so detail isn't lost.
Agreed, thanks4. The ring isn't in focus.
It was in motion, however the out of focus parts was just me trying to focus quickly before the ring fell lol. This was at f/36 and 1/250s shutter at iso 100 the only reason some of it is in focus is the very small aperture.Curiously enough, the WB, shadow treatment etc. did not pop out at me when I looked at the ring - what struck me was the dynamic tension of its position - caught in the moment of falling over (no apparent means of support). Was the ring in motion when you shot this (narrow depth of field suggests wide open and fast)? I liked your first photo a lot.
DJB
Prop it up with a toothpick. Get it in focus. Then clone out the toothpick in post.It was in motion, however the out of focus parts was just me trying to focus quickly before the ring fell lol.
You should read about diffraction. No one uses f/36 if they want a clear image.This was at f/36 and 1/250s shutter at iso 100 the only reason some of it is in focus is the very small aperture.
Thank you, I did not know this. So in what type of situation would you use f/36? I don't see why you would not want a clear image all the timeYou should read about diffraction. No one uses f/36 if they want a clear image.
Thanks, good idea.Prop it up with a toothpick. Get it in focus. Then clone out the toothpick in post.
This is terrible advice and needs correcting. Only bad macro photographers would use f/36 on small format digital.That's not true, macro photographers use f/36, that's why it's available on macro lenses.
As Aperture is part of lighting, What on earth are you shooting at f/36 for?It was in motion, however the out of focus parts was just me trying to focus quickly before the ring fell lol. This was at f/36 and 1/250s shutter at iso 100 the only reason some of it is in focus is the very small aperture.
How about "inappropriate" lighting, especially the ring? That isn't how you light shiny metal. At least it isn't until you learn the more appropriate way first. The OP should look up "tent lighting" and start experimenting with that for a while before he gets "arty".Listen, you're asking about lighting, but you're missing some fundamentals here. One shot is overexposed with clipped highlights, and the other is out of focus. These are the glaring mistakes in your photos, not the lighting. Lighting is much more subjective and nuanced, focus is not.
Both shots are lit satisfactorily, in that I can see them. Neither are "bad" lighting, but neither are great.
This is terrible advice and needs correcting. Only bad macro photographers would use f/36 on small format digital.That's not true, macro photographers use f/36, that's why it's available on macro lenses.
Good ones stack the focus and combine in Photoshop. It's quite easy.
I'm willing to be proven wrong, please link a few photographers' galleries with exif info or their blogs indicating how important f/36 is.I disagree, there are excellent macro photographers out there who shoot at f/36. >