I do all sorts of product photography but I'm having real problems trying to achieve the right results with this one!
I need to shoot several car wiper blades looking from one end but with the full blade pin sharp and large (i.e. filling the frame). I'm able to shoot close up and sharp but with a shallow depth of field, OR I can shoot with a large depth of field but the image is soft.
Currently, I'm trying different combinations of 35mm, 50mm, 18-55mm and 70-300mm lenses, with differing distances from the subject and various aperture settings, but I'm finding that no approach gives me more than a few inches of the blade in sharp focus. I'm having to take multiple pics focused on different points and then merge them in Photoshop. But even here, I have problems, because even manually changing the focus, changes the size of the blade in the resulting image, meaning I can't simply take lots of pics, overlay them, and mask the blurred parts of each. Have you tried manually aligning partially blurred images in PS? - it's not easy!
Any suggestions for a different approach, or is it simply that I don't have the correct lens for the job?
I need to shoot several car wiper blades looking from one end but with the full blade pin sharp and large (i.e. filling the frame). I'm able to shoot close up and sharp but with a shallow depth of field, OR I can shoot with a large depth of field but the image is soft.
Currently, I'm trying different combinations of 35mm, 50mm, 18-55mm and 70-300mm lenses, with differing distances from the subject and various aperture settings, but I'm finding that no approach gives me more than a few inches of the blade in sharp focus. I'm having to take multiple pics focused on different points and then merge them in Photoshop. But even here, I have problems, because even manually changing the focus, changes the size of the blade in the resulting image, meaning I can't simply take lots of pics, overlay them, and mask the blurred parts of each. Have you tried manually aligning partially blurred images in PS? - it's not easy!
Any suggestions for a different approach, or is it simply that I don't have the correct lens for the job?

