V8burble
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 3,459
- Name
- Andrew
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I am shooting a set of archive photographs of some carved ivories, one of which is a casket/lidded box approx 10" wide x 5" deep x 4" high (like a tea caddy). Lighting-wise I am absolutely fine with and able to highlight the detailed carving nicely with cross lighting and varying fill to achive a nice balance but shooting at around 50mm focal length and at a camera to subject distance of about 14" to frame the box nicely for an isometric view I am stuck for DoF... I am limited to f/22 with my 24-70mm which doesn't result in enough DoF to cover the subject. So, my only option that I can see is to pull back further to increase the DoF, but for this type of photography the whole point is to document as much detail as possible which by pulling back further reduces the subject size in the uncropped frame and hence recorded detail. So it's a bit of a catch 22 situation. If I reduce focal length I introduce distortion... if I increase camera to subject distance I reduce detail. I guess, without the pixel count of say a D800 with which I could pull back from the subject and then heavily crop the image to fill the frame, I'm stuck. Maybe that's a good reason for me to buy a D800 
The only solution I can see is to just rely on orthographic views of the box to represent the carving details and include the isometric purely for proportion purposes with the leading faces/edges in focus.
The only solution I can see is to just rely on orthographic views of the box to represent the carving details and include the isometric purely for proportion purposes with the leading faces/edges in focus.