Jewelry is notoriously difficult to photograph without the right lighting and equipment. One of my first assignments as a reporter was to cover the reopening of a jewelry store in town, and I had a lot of trouble trying to capture the jeweler's designs. So I knew going in that trying to take a decent photo was going to be a difficult task.
I did some reading on the good ol' Internet and tried to copy this design using the materials I had on hand, which included my Canon (regular ol' lens), a clip-on desk lamp, a clip-on work light, a ring box, a wine glass, a cheap tripod and some tracing paper. I only had enough lights to do a light on one side of the ring, which I taped tracing paper to in an effort to diffuse the light. The other clip light I positioned below and aimed directly into the diamond to try and catch that sparkle.
The next hour and a half was trial and error over and over again, adjusting the light, adjusting the camera, adjusting the settings on the camera, moving the ring, moving the light, moving things just a fraction of an inch, having a cat sit on my whole set up. It was frustrating, but out of the 150 photos I took, I wound up with four good ones. Doesn't it always go that way?
The very last photo I took, which I posted above, was taken at last second with my iPhone 4 and then converted to black and white. I also edited out some minuscule hairs and dust on the ring box. I thought that turned out to be the best of the lot, and I am equal parts pissed and pleased about that.
Overall I think I did a pretty bang up job. :) It's a goal of mine to learn more about lighting in the next year or so, and how to illuminate things, and how to control where light hits things. I can already see it's going to take a lot of patience.
More photos of the ring after the jump.
Front view, taken with my Canon.
On my finger, taken with my Canon.
Side view.
Side view.
Oscar "helps" with the set-up.
No comments:
Post a Comment