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Colin
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2012

2011

2011-11-20 20:02:40
rating 5.3
2011-11-08 01:02:18
rating 5.1
2011-10-27 20:11:07
rating 6
2011-09-30 04:23:23
rating 5.6
2011-08-12 00:20:19
rating 4.7
2011-07-28 21:51:57
rating 5.7
2011-03-12 01:28:16
rating 5.1
2011-02-17 06:13:51
rating 5.2
2011-02-10 21:57:00
rating 5.2

2008

2008-08-19 23:01:03
rating 4.3
2008-01-23 14:07:27
rating 2.7
2011-07-28 21:51:57
20 votes, rating 5.7
Miniature photography
***This is a repost of something I wrote on another forum, but is as relevant as ever***

There are a few guidelines you should adhere to when shooting models:

1) Immobilise the camera - a tabletop tripod is usually sufficient for your average digicam.

2) Make sure it's in focus! This Space Marine is out of focus, just slightly. Using AF, it helps to have more light on the model, and if that doesn't work, acquaint yourself with manual focusing if your camera is capable of it. Remember that your camera is limited as to how close it can focus, AF or manually.

3) Lighting - you can either use:
a. Daylight (outside on a cloudy day is ideal), make sure the face you are shooting is not in shadow.
b. On-board flash; try to diffuse or bounce it to avoid harsh bright-spots and shadows using a white bag or translucent carton - take a look on eBay for 'flash (diffuser,soft box)' for some of the products designed for this purpose -
c. Setup two desk lamps either side of the model (see point 5. White balance if you use this option). To improve things, buy or build a light tent or box - the simplest construction is a cardboard box lined with white paper, which allows the light sources to be bounced off the white walls rather than directly onto the model. If you cut 'windows' in the box and cover those with the paper, you can shine the light through the walls.
d. Off-camera flash - much the same principal as the lamps, but requires more expensive gear. There are digital flash 'slaves' on the market now that can (learn to) work with a digicam.

4) Exposure - ideally, get it right in-camera. It helps not to place the model against a bright white background, as this may fool the camera into under-exposure. It can also be improved afterwards:

Using Levels in GIMP


You will notice I've moved the white and black points (the sliders on the horizontal axis of the graph) to match the extreme edges of the histogram (which represents the range of pixel brightness in the image). I've also moved the middle slider to boost the gamma - this has the effect of brightening the mid-tones. See that 'Auto' button? It works pretty well too!

5) White balance - to avoid colour-casts, learn how your camera's white balance works. Use the setting that most reflects your working conditions (daylight, fluorescent or incandescent lamps etc.) or set it manually by using a neutral gray target. Again, this can be fixed afterwards (GIMP has a Colour Balance feature in the Colours menu), but it saves time and hassle to get it right first time.

6) Sharpening - to improve the apparent detail present in the image, get to know the Unsharp Mask (aka. USM) tool. For websize pictures, typically 640-1024 pixels on one edge, keep the radius small, near the minimum value.


7) Use the Crop tool! I've seen more than one miniature on ebay which is a tiny speck in the middle of a photo of someone's dinner table or duvet. If it's not relevant, it shouldn't be in the picture.



I don't have any photos of my own collection, because I've painted so few of them...

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Comments
Posted by blocknroll on 2011-07-29 00:02:49
good work mate, a useful reminder. thanks :)
Posted by Colin on 2011-07-29 00:24:13
The Space Marine isn't mine, nor the original photo, I just took screenshots of me fixing it for the tutorial.

I do have some actual photos of miniatures!

https://picasaweb.google.com/colmorrison/ChaosPactTeamBuildGallery02?authuser=0&authkey=Gv1sRgCISg6uHh1qe2igE&feat=embedwebsite

They were on a grey table, no reflectors in the case, with bounced flash off the ceiling and wall behind me(i.e. the flash on the camera could swivel round to fire over my head) - white ceilings and walls are a big help here.

You can view details of the shot - I used very small aperture (f16 - on a compact, this number will be less, maybe f8, for reasons far too complicated to go into!), and as I was using flash, didn't have to use a tripod. As the shot was only for use on the web, I shot it at ISO 800, relatively high, to make the most of the flash.
Posted by pizzamogul on 2011-07-29 04:32:07
I thought you were going to blog about taking photos with a teeny, tiny camera.
Posted by Colin on 2011-07-29 05:07:09
I did. If you happen to have a monstrous, tank-mounted camera, then that'll work too. The 7 points I gave are fairly universal, though you can cheat.
Posted by Garion on 2011-07-29 09:24:57
Thats great. I will stick it in the miniatures help section for you :)
Posted by Garion on 2011-07-29 09:49:55
Here it is - http://fumbbl.com/help:MiniPhotography