I think some 'clients' are confusing camera owners and photographers!
Seems like a pretty good summary to me. Especially #6![]()
Since you have the budget, get started with a couple of Lencarta Smartflashes (or any other entry-level outfit - eg Bowens, Elinchrom - though they'll push your budget) and a softbox, preferably on a boom.
They will do the light tent thing (you can make one in five minutes with a couple of bits of grease-proof paper) and once you get the hang of things, most of the creative stuff too. You can build from there and they'll be wonderfully useful for any other studio work you might want to do.
Thank you very much for your recommandations, Pat. I will have a look around to see what can I find and for what prices.
Much appreciated.
Wrong approach. You won't have time for extensive PS work, what you need to do is to get the shots as close to perfect in camera as possible.I should also mention I am more photoshop junkee than photographer.
I suspect that it's all about marketing and nothing about quality.Ozei, that looks interesting. I wonder why there is such a massive price difference 75£ vs 240£. It must be something to do with quality of that equipement?
It has nothing to do with flooding the place with light and everything to do with using light well, to create shadows that make the products look real and which make people want to touch them - and they can only touch them by buying them. I'm not saying that it can't be done with hotshoe flashes but, for a beginner, it's a very hard work way of doing it.Studio flashes are great but even our small Bowens heads are overkill for things like fishing reels, fly-tying sequences, bait and other items that I can just as easily light with two speedlights and a reflector. The power only comes into it when we work with larger items like luggagge where we need to flood the place with light....
I am in a similar boat, although not yet at the point where we're opening a web shop. My partner wants to sell handmade home decorations - table runners and the like. Because they are hand made, they are relatively expensive, so will need to be photographed appropriately to make people want to buy them. When I asked about this (thanks Garry and Richard for helping) the key thing was lighting them so that the texture and colour of the material was inviting. The impression I got was that just surrounding them with light wouldn't do that and you had to be creative with your lighting - white background or not.
My concern (without any hard and fast knowledge - please correct me if I'm wrong those that know) is that lighting them in a light tent will certainly light the product but you won't get a "wow" image, but a lit from all sides type shot. Again, the impression I have from my other thread is that to sell the things you are selling at any premium requires a "wow" image of the product.
Yes, you may well get better images than you currently have but it still may not work as you don't have good/enticing enough images to persuade people to buy the product at any form of premium without touching the object as you would in a shop. I think this is what a couple of people have been referring to above...
Light: Science & Magic - or my Photolearn still life tutorialOff to find a good book about product photography
The Lencarta website is down at the moment with technical probs, when it's working again I'll post links to the stuff you need - a small product photography table, with a boom arm and a couple of lights is all you need and the table will do everything that a light tent can do, but much better. And it can be taken down and put up in a few seconds.I keep looking at Lencarta website, but it's down atm. Will come back later tonight or tomorrow.
Now the light tent is out of my list, I think I will have to build my own using white paper. I still need to figure a way to be able to easily take it down and put it back up whenever needed.
No worries. Flash In The Pan (FITP) on here and a few other chaps seem to know the ins and outs of the Yongnuo flashes, but I think i'm right in saying they all have a manual mode - I think the models vary as to the number of power increments, and more recently, how they work with TTL. A basic flash with a manual mode will work as well as a 580EX when it's on a standard, non-TTL wireless trigger system.
I use Phottix Stratos triggers but the RF-602/603 triggers have a big following because they're cheap and have a half-decent working range. Look on the bay and you'll see there are packs for sale of 2,3,4 or even 5 units that vary in price as to how many flashes you want triggers for. Think I paid about £35 for a set two receiver + one trigger set for my Nikons. Think they act as tranceivers so any unit can be used to trigger the rest. My Stratos' are hooked up to a variety of flashguns; one SB28, one SB24 and two SB800s and all work seemlessly. Been shooting food today with a chef and using a few softbox on stands, brought so much more light to the party than was available through windows and having a mobile studio just helped me get what I wanted. Plus it packed up into one bag at the end, easily carried to any location.
Anyway, I'm off on a tangent here...![]()
Thanks once again Pat.
Had a look around and I think this is sort of kit I need
http://www.backdropsource.co.uk/Pro...white-muslin-backdrop-with-3-flash-light-kits
I'm not saying this is the brand or even the company I will buy from, but I think this is roughly what I need:
- 1 x backdrop
- 1 x backdrop stand
- 3 x flash lights
- 3 x sofbox for flash lights
- 3 x light stand
- wireless set of triggers
Anything else I need to add to that?
I will have a look on Lencarta when their website will be back.
You can do much better for the same moneyList Price : £1,038.00
Sale Price : £519.00
You Save : £519.00 ( 50 %)
Other people have been selling that same 'professional kit' for £300 - including VAT...
You can do much better for the same money
.... Ozei, that looks interesting. I wonder why there is such a massive price difference 75£ vs 240£. It must be something to do with quality of that equipement?....
Wrong approach. You won't have time for extensive PS work, what you need to do is to get the shots as close to perfect in camera as possible.
I suspect that it's all about marketing and nothing about quality.
It has nothing to do with flooding the place with light and everything to do with using light well, to create shadows that make the products look real and which make people want to touch them - and they can only touch them by buying them. I'm not saying that it can't be done with hotshoe flashes but, for a beginner, it's a very hard work way of doing it.
Light: Science & Magic - or my Photolearn still life tutorial
The Lencarta website is down at the moment with technical probs, when it's working again I'll post links to the stuff you need - a small product photography table, with a boom arm and a couple of lights is all you need and the table will do everything that a light tent can do, but much better. And it can be taken down and put up in a few seconds.
Product photography isn't hard but it's a pretty steep learning curve. It's been good to me, it's provided me with a very good living for many years.
Like many specialities, it's pretty easy to become quite good at photographing a limited range of products - in other words, it may take a lifetime to become expert at photographing all types of products well, but it doesn't take long to learn how to photograph products that have similar qualities, and after a while it becomes a simple production line, so it will be well within your capabilities.
Basically you need just two things. Knowledge and the right equipment, and there is no substitute for either of those.
Adrian - I don't think there's likely to be much difference (equipment quality-wise) between this kit on ebay http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Pro-Photo-Stu...tem27abf7a41d&clk_rvr_id=236637535172&afsrc=1 and this kit from Tabletop http://www.tabletopstudio.co.uk/Pages/Universal Kit 30.htm. The ebay seller has a large (5,085) 100% feedback and offers returns within 7 days - so you could order one send it back if you're not happy with the build quality. The worst that can happen with the ebay CFL/tent kit is you'll have spent £79.99 + p&p of your budget.
If I were you I'd try and do some testing on the different lighting systems (continuous/flash/CFL) & (tent/no tent) and establish which you're comfortable with. Garry is right though when he talks about light modifiers - you'll need them whichever type of lighting you choose.

.....
It has nothing to do with flooding the place with light and everything to do with using light well, to create shadows that make the products look real and which make people want to touch them - and they can only touch them by buying them....
Sadly, you're right - there are a lot of number crunchers making the wrong decisions for the right reasons and just about everyone except the largest Companies tend to play safe and go for bland rather than creative, but in my experience creative wins every time in terms of sales, except of course when the shots are purely illustrative, i.e. just showing what a widget actually looks like so that buyers are sure that they're buying the bit they really need to mend their lefthanded whatsit. As an example of what I think is good practice, take a look at the Logitech website. Simple, clean but not flat.You're right in a sense Garry; product shots are often the teaser to make the viewer go and buy the product but in many cases (as in my experience at work) the shots are better received by viewers (in my case advertisers AND readers) when they're shot pretty flat, i.e; with very even light..... unfortunately, I work in an industry where the creative individuals are far outnumbered by those who just want safe, plain and simple, and more often than not, that means very basic lighting that only serves the purpose of showing an item as clearly as possible and not showing it in a 'WOW!' sense....
Regards the 'flooding' comment, I meant to say the Bowens heads come into play more for me when more light = greater DoF/higher f-stop. That's where speedlights just can't cut it I feel. With diffusers like snoots and honeycombs they (studio heads) are brilliantly effective to do what you're saying, creating depth and dynamic shadows, but the chances for really creative work at my place is so limited the rarely get an airing. Sad but that's the reality....
There's no specific toolkit as a lot depends on the type of product being shot, whether it is shiny, has texture, complex curves etc.In case of modifiers, what set would you go for for 3 flash light set up? 2 umbrelas and 1 softbox?
I'm trying to make a complete shopping list of all the stuff I need before I start checking prices for specific products.
Sadly, you're right - there are a lot of number crunchers making the wrong decisions for the right reasons and just about everyone except the largest Companies tend to play safe and go for bland rather than creative, but in my experience creative wins every time in terms of sales, except of course when the shots are purely illustrative, i.e. just showing what a widget actually looks like so that buyers are sure that they're buying the bit they really need to mend their lefthanded whatsit. As an example of what I think is good practice, take a look at the Logitech website. Simple, clean but not flat....

I'm like the Logitech shots - the variation in shadow and reflection looks great. Slick but not over complicated.
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There's no specific toolkit as a lot depends on the type of product being shot, whether it is shiny, has texture, complex curves etc.
But a useful setup for a 3 head kit would be:
1 large square or rectangular softbox, normally used overhead on a boom arm
1 smaller softbox or beauty dish, for frontal (more or less) lighting
1 standard reflector with 10 or 20 degree honeycomb (both would be better, 10 degrees if only 1 is available) to create texture where needed, or backlighting
1 umbella, better to have both shoot through and reflective, for on-axis fill
Small product shooting table - which I can't link to as the site is still downThanks Garry. 2 lights it is then.
But you got me confused there, no light tent and no backdrop? So what will my background be then?
I agreed to white background. I can always make it white in PS thats not a problem, but it would be easier to make use of white background and then only modify it slightly in PS to be RGB 255.255.255
You can, but there isn't a lot of room unless you increase the height by putting it on blocks.Slight thread hijack but can you put a light under the shooting table and get uplighting through it?
I shall be annoyed if it is £60 as it was £49.99 last time I looked!
err... Last Monday.Thanks Garry. Any word when Lencarta website might be back and running?
Those Logitech images are good, but ironically, they've been heavily retouched and the background/shadows have been photoshopped in.
If you decide to go for flashes, I can recommend the Lastolite Ezybox Hotshoe Kits. I use them instead of a tent to shoot small things. Also, there is now available a Speedlight kit from Viewfinder Photography which I have written up here:
http://blog.digitaldepot.co.uk/
It has a bundle of goodies for modifying speedlights for under £100
Lance,Not wishing to hijack the thread..in reply to the above..i do agree with you..
I am new to photography of any kind, let alone product photography..lol.
Photoshop is completely new to me..very confusing.
I've taken on board your comments and will only use them to try and improve but i think the light tent allows me to control the lighting when the natural light is naff..i fully understand that putting the tent on the garden table in the summer and taking pictures is much better than using tent lighting..
I've long way to go and thanks for your comments...
Good luck to the chap who started this thread, have fun as i do.
thankyou.
It isn't about the type of light that the light tent buggers up, even though any type of artificial continuous lighting available for home use does produce wildly different colours, it's about the fact that you're producing what I'm sure are excellent products but your light tent is making them look like something you'd buy from a £1 shop...i fully understand that putting the tent on the garden table in the summer and taking pictures is much better than using tent lighting..
You really do need to learn your way around Photoshop, it's an essential tool - but the function of PS is to turn excellent shots into outstanding ones, it can't turn a bad shot into a good one.Photoshop is completely new to me..very confusing.
Garry Edwards said:...which is what this thread is all about.