Monday, September 03, 2007

If You're Interested Dept.

I thought I'd write up a quick 'tutorial' on how I photograph my toys. Overall, I do it in a pretty straightforward way:

I use my dining room chairs to shoot my toys against. They're brightly colored and curved, so they make great backdrops, as long as the toy isn't very tall. I'll use one of the white chairs or one of the orange ones, depending on the color of the toy.

I usually shoot in my living room early in the morning (between 6 and 10 AM) to use as much natural sunlight as possible. I think the main windows face north, so depending on the time of year, I'll get plenty of light streaming in.

Since the seats of the chairs are curved, sometimes I'll put a sheet of foam core across it if I want to shoot multiple items. One toy might sit at a skewed angle, but I can usually compensate with the camera's angle. If the toy is too big to shoot in a chair, I'll plop the foam core on a stack of plastic tubs and shoot against a wall.

I use a Olympus Camedia C-3040 Zoom (3.3 megapixels). If you actually go to the trouble to get one of these cameras (it's five years old or more), be sure it has a memory card with it - they don't make the cards anymore, and to get one by itself would cost over a hundred dollars.

Ninety percent of the time, I use the macro setting (that's the flower icon on this particular camera), and auto focus (I think that's the default setting) with no flash. If the toy needs a longer depth of field (like a toy car), I'll use the manual focus. If it's the white backdrop, I'll aim the setup into the sun, keeping the whole thing out of full-blast sunlight, but not setting up in the shadows, either. If it's the orange backdrop, I'll aim it all against the sun - the light usually comes over the top of the chair at that time of day and gives me a nice rim-lit effect without washing out the toy or the background. If it's a small object, the orange will drop down to a nice, rich orange color. Using a higher camera angle and tilting down can help improve this effect.

I'll shoot ten or twenty pictures of each toy until I get the angle that I want - sometimes I have to 'find it'. If I'm worried that the auto-focus isn't cutting it, I'll shoot from a variety of distances to cover myself. Then I'll connect the card to my Mac and dump the shots into iPhoto. I'll pick my favorite and use the 'Adjust' tool to do some rudimentary tweaking - this usually involves sharpening, cropping, straightening and brightening the shot, since I don't use flash (I think the light from a flash looks unnatural most of the time).

Once I'm happy, I'll drag it onto my desktop and do the more serious fiddling in Photoshop, since it's a more powerful tool. That can involve separating the whole bg as its own layer, and assembling bits and pieces of multiple copies of it together, in case the natural color ramping isn't working the way that I want. Hue, saturation, contrast, paint flaws (clone paint is your friend) - it's all up for grabs. I have no problem with making the photo look better than the toy, but I try not to go overboard - sometimes I'm successful with that, sometimes not!

And that's it! I post them to Flickr and go on to the next toy. I have gone on to do a second or third shoot with a toy, or a second pass through Photoshop, but for the most part, I've got enough un-shot toys ahead of me that I try to keep moving forward.

Hope that was informative - let me know if you have any questions!

Labels: , ,

9 Comments:

Blogger roque said...

Thanks for the tutorial, Jeff. I'm such a process junkie. Good stuff!

10:11 AM  
Blogger Jeff Pidgeon said...

No problem! Jennie Lerew was asking about it, so I thought I'd do a write-up.

11:39 AM  
Blogger Dave said...

Haha thanks Jeff! I was actually wondering how your shots ended up so nice the last time I was here :)

12:34 PM  
Blogger Jenny said...

This is great stuff! Ingenious technique and great results. Thanks for taking the trouble to put it all up for us.

Funny--when looking at the dragon on Flickr I almost wrote: "That must be north light, eh?" but thought no, I'm a clueless idjit--and hey! It really IS north light! I guess all that they say about it is true--it's wonderfully bright and "cold"(well, to me, anyway).

Right now our main imac is on the fritz, sadly--so I can't access PS(Pretty pathetic to upload iphone pics but I'm glad I can do it. Hopefully soon I'll get the 'puter sorted out and I can get back to photoshopping properly again at home.

1:35 PM  
Blogger Jeff said...

So I guess you gave up on that "Studio-in-a-box" eh? I like the pics on the chairs are SO much better.

Jenny's iMac is on the fritz?? That's funny, mine was acting weird two weeks ago. It the power supply right?

3:07 PM  
Blogger Jeff Pidgeon said...

I haven't completely given up - I think the studio-in-a-box thing could work for nighttime shooting, but I need to buy a backdrop to use in the basement, plus a third light for fill. Right now, the chair and sunlight method is faster and cheaper.

It is limiting, though, in terms of when I can shoot, and I tend to clutter up the living room when I get busy at work. It'd be better to shoot elsewhere if I could.

4:19 PM  
Blogger Theodore said...

Nice tutorial, Jeff... thanks. Where did you find that dragon? Is he the one from the Yosemite Sam cartoons?

11:31 PM  
Blogger Jeff Pidgeon said...

He is! I bought it at the San Jose toy show two weekends ago, but you can get it online for $29.99 + shipping:

http://www.entertainmentearth.com/prodinfo.asp?number=FU8230

12:53 AM  
Blogger Lee-Roy said...

Genius! But do you handhold the camera or use a tripod?

Thanks for sharing your process! I may modify it to my own needs/ability at some point down the line.

9:39 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home

Wikio