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General Photography
Shoe photography with photo box
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<blockquote data-quote="Rexer John" data-source="post: 133892" data-attributes="member: 12691"><p>That's great advice from Moab Man.</p><p></p><p>Usually the advice would be to stay away from full manual but you are fully controlling the scene, so once you get a picture you like, those settings should be the same for pretty much any shoe. Although you may need different setting for a white shoe than a black shoe.</p><p></p><p>If you're only getting a small part of the shoe in focus you need to use a smaller aperture. To compensate, you will need to use a slower shutter speed. </p><p>Trial and error, but once you get in the zone, you will be able to get through a lot of shoes pretty quickly.</p><p></p><p>Again, as Moab man says, white balance should be manual too, otherwise the camera can be fooled into varying the white balance. Your lighting wont be changing colour, so best to set the white balance to get shots looking the right colours then leave it set.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rexer John, post: 133892, member: 12691"] That's great advice from Moab Man. Usually the advice would be to stay away from full manual but you are fully controlling the scene, so once you get a picture you like, those settings should be the same for pretty much any shoe. Although you may need different setting for a white shoe than a black shoe. If you're only getting a small part of the shoe in focus you need to use a smaller aperture. To compensate, you will need to use a slower shutter speed. Trial and error, but once you get in the zone, you will be able to get through a lot of shoes pretty quickly. Again, as Moab man says, white balance should be manual too, otherwise the camera can be fooled into varying the white balance. Your lighting wont be changing colour, so best to set the white balance to get shots looking the right colours then leave it set. [/QUOTE]
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Shoe photography with photo box
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