Advise on product photographing

Advise on product photographing

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Discussion

TT Tim

Original Poster:

4,162 posts

249 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
In my business I need to occasionally take product shots, i.e photos of books or novelty items.

I'm having a real problem getting a decent colour balance under artifical lights.

I'm using an Olympus E10 and, at present hallogen lights, but even though I'm white aligning the camera before shooting I'm still getting a yellow cast.

Any advise on what is the most economic/easiest solution?

Are daylight bulbs available for hallogens?

Here are examples of before and after processing:




Thanks

Tim

>>> Edited by TT Tim on Thursday 19th February 12:51

jeremyc

23,739 posts

286 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
I know next to nothing about photography, but what about trying to take the shots outside, in natural light?

Weather permitting, obviously.

luca brazzi

3,975 posts

267 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
You seem to have fixed it properly in software using a colour cast correction tool. Can you set the camera to a different colour temperature, light flourescent, or tungsten etc.?

If not, software is a good solution.
LB

srider

709 posts

284 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
Are you using custom white balance? If not, get one
of these Then use it to set a custom white balance. Can't remember how on the E10, but if you get stuck I can find out.

>> Edited by srider on Thursday 19th February 13:51

TT Tim

Original Poster:

4,162 posts

249 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
I can colour correct in Photoshop okay, it's just time consuming. It would be a lot easier if shots were okay as they came out of the camera.

Having done some reasearch it looks like a Portaflash Tungsten Digi Light might be the answer, just thought I might get away without spending another £150.



I can set the temp on the camera but can't adjust for lighting type.

Tim

srider

709 posts

284 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
TT Tim said:
I can colour correct in Photoshop okay, it's just time consuming. It would be a lot easier if shots were okay as they came out of the camera.

Having done some reasearch it looks like a Portaflash Tungsten Digi Light might be the answer, just thought I might get away without spending another £150.


I can set the temp on the camera but can't adjust for lighting type.


You can using a grey card, see above. I think it's manual WB on the E10. How does it look with the WB set to 3000K?

TT Tim said:

Tim

TT Tim

Original Poster:

4,162 posts

249 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
srider said:
You can using a grey card, see above. I think it's manual WB on the E10. How does it look with the WB set to 3000K?


thanks for the tip - makes for an interesting experiment, I need to sort out the exposure but this is a comparision of the temp settings available on the E10 and the effect they have:



Thanks again, a bit more experiment in order I think.

Tim

srider

709 posts

284 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
TT Tim said:

srider said:
You can using a grey card, see above. I think it's manual WB on the E10. How does it look with the WB set to 3000K?



thanks for the tip - makes for an interesting experiment, I need to sort out the exposure but this is a comparision of the temp settings available on the E10 and the effect they have:



Thanks again, a bit more experiment in order I think.

Tim


Without hassle of setting a manual WB, 3000 or 3700 look closest. How about setting one of those and doing a PS action to tweak it a bit (as it'll be consistent with a WB set)?

simpo two

85,850 posts

267 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
Hmm, all the above look like mud!

In the past (photographing laptops for a training manual) I was amazed how good PS Autolevels (Ctrl/Shift/L) was at restoring colour balance in these cases. However, if the quantity makes this too tedious, and bearing in mind the 'simple is good' theory, I'd move your set-up to a nice big window with good (but not direct) light and carry on.

Or send 'em to me of course!

leszekg

263 posts

269 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
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Don't know whether your camera takes filters but if so have you considered using a colour correction filter? There are filters for both daylight and artificial light correction which are normally used for compensating for using daylight film under artifical light and tungsten balanced film used in daylight. Don't know whether these would be of any use with a digital camera assuming you can't find a way using the features of your camera.

Mad Dave

7,158 posts

265 months

Friday 20th February 2004
quotequote all
Whenever im photographing indoors, i just use a light blue Cokin filter - all my shots seem to come out spot on when doing this.

Apparently you can also get 'indoor' film that has a blue cast to counteract the yellow cast you get if you use outdoor film indoors.

TT Tim

Original Poster:

4,162 posts

249 months

Friday 20th February 2004
quotequote all
Thanks Dave, but i'm using digital. so unfortunately i don't have the luxury of different film types - thanks all the same.

Tim

Bacardi

2,235 posts

278 months

Friday 20th February 2004
quotequote all
Just looked at the specs for the E10 on DPreview, apparently you can shoot in RAW format. This would be the answer to your problem. Shooting in RAW ignores the CT settings of the camera. Shoot a grey card in the first shot then batch process all the files in a RAW converter, matching grey balance, curves, sharpness etc, to the first file. You can also process straight into CMYK (assuming you want to go to print) bypassing the the crap sRGB colour space giving you more accurate colour.

Not sure what software comes with the E10 but it's most probably rubbish. If you are using PS CS it has Adobe RAW converter built in, not sure, but I think that would process the E10 files.

Check out Russell Brown's Image Processor tutorial which uses Java script to batch process files:

www.russellbrown.com/body.html

HTH

stevieb

5,252 posts

269 months

Friday 20th February 2004
quotequote all
When i took some indoors photos over xmas, i found the ones in the kitchen to come out best.

I put this down to the kitchen having Halogen lights. Try and light up the area a little with Halogen lights and see what it comes out like but do not directly point the lights at the target or you will get light spots on the target.

Could be the cheapest way to try and solve it if you have a few halogen desk lamps around your house.

Also what camera are you using as on my dated minolta i can change the lighting tyoe.

Steve

simpo two

85,850 posts

267 months

Friday 20th February 2004
quotequote all
I still maintain soft natural light is best - halogen will give you fierce shadows.

srider

709 posts

284 months

Saturday 21st February 2004
quotequote all
simpo two said:
I still maintain soft natural light is best - halogen will give you fierce shadows.


Done properly, product photography is very tricky. Ideally, you want consistent omni-directional light, like you get on a cloudy day. Something like this is ideal (from www.lastolite.com)



As with most things photographic, it can get very expensive, very quickly

te51cle

2,342 posts

250 months

Monday 23rd February 2004
quotequote all
leszekg said:
Don't know whether your camera takes filters but if so have you considered using a colour correction filter? There are filters for both daylight and artificial light correction which are normally used for compensating for using daylight film under artifical light and tungsten balanced film used in daylight. Don't know whether these would be of any use with a digital camera assuming you can't find a way using the features of your camera.


That'll be an 80A filter. You can get screw-in ones if that's the only filter you'll ever use, or get a Cokin filter holder, adaptor ring and 020 filter for a few quid more and you'll be able to add others such as a FLW (fluorescent light correction) easily too.

That said, the cheapest way is to find a north-facing window and take your photos at midday.

srider

709 posts

284 months

Monday 23rd February 2004
quotequote all
te51cle said:

leszekg said:
Don't know whether your camera takes filters but if so have you considered using a colour correction filter? There are filters for both daylight and artificial light correction which are normally used for compensating for using daylight film under artifical light and tungsten balanced film used in daylight. Don't know whether these would be of any use with a digital camera assuming you can't find a way using the features of your camera.



That'll be an 80A filter. You can get screw-in ones if that's the only filter you'll ever use, or get a Cokin filter holder, adaptor ring and 020 filter for a few quid more and you'll be able to add others such as a FLW (fluorescent light correction) easily too.

That said, the cheapest way is to find a north-facing window and take your photos at midday.


Filters won't work with a digital camera set to Auto White Balance, the camera will just try to correct for them.

te51cle

2,342 posts

250 months

Wednesday 25th February 2004
quotequote all
srider said:


Filters won't work with a digital camera set to Auto White Balance, the camera will just try to correct for them.


Agreed, but judging by the before and after photos at the beginning of this thread I don't think the auto white balance is doing what it should. A blue filter would help get rid of that orange tint without so much post processing work being necessary.

simpo two

85,850 posts

267 months

Wednesday 25th February 2004
quotequote all
I guess another answer would be a diffused flash... diffused to soften the shadows and flash as its a higher colour temperature.