Friday, January 23, 2015

6 stations

Water Droplet:  This image was created with a macro lens, also, colored paper standing up behind the tray of water, and an external flash pointed towards the paper, so it can reflect on the water. This image had a multi colored paper, or may have been manipulated in light room. Also, it could have food coloring in the water. A way to drop the water precisely is to use contact solution. The bottle is already designed to let only drops of water out, so that may help.

Also: I found a really cool website that shows behind the scenes on water droplet photography and shows a diagram. Might be helpful:
http://anthonyroderman.com/high-speed-water-droplet-photography-on-a-budget/


Black Acrylic: This image was creates with a macro lens. Its very important to keep the black acrylic sheet clean and also, have a black velvet backdrop behind it to make sure that everything is black. Also, keeping the aperture to about f/16 will ensure that the background is solid black. No flash is required but a studio light is.

Light Spinning: A black acrylic looks like it was used underneath this photo. A velvet background was used to make the background black. An object with LED lights is required to make this picture possible. Also, having a VERY low shutter speed and a higher aperture to ensure the dark background.

Bubbles: A black background was used and so was a macro lens. The camera was set at a very high shutter speed to ensure all action was caught and it creates a sharper image. Also, a high aperture was used to ensure the background was black.

Focus stacking: This photo is created using four different photos. What you will need is a long macro lens, a wide aperture, and a tripod. What the photographer is supposed to do is take several photos with different focal spots and process them in photoshop and blend them so that you use only the sharp parts of the photo.





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