Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 6:56 am)
It was pretty tight, but I managed to be able to light and shoot a lot of product photography as I built enough clientelle to rent a warehouse space (I now have a 20x40 shooting space - VERY happy to have the room!). It's now our office (obviously) - I used to have 2 workstations t home, now I'm down to just 1.
I know it's pretty tight in your kitchen, but you've got enough space to shoot small to medium sized product (from jewelry to shoes) so keep going until you can "move out"! They'll never stop coming up with new jewelry designs, so find yourself some clients!
Good luck-
-Lew ;-)
seeyus Tunde
@Babuci - you can replace the paper that you're using as a base with tracing paper - make it a couple of layers thick if it seems to thin for you at first. Given that you're shooting through a glass table this should work fairly well.
Unless, or course, the base material I'm looking at in your above image is one of the side panels - in which case there's your light diffusion panel - put a light underneath and shoot away.
Good luck-
-Lew ;-)
Kort Kramer - Kramer Kreations
Hello All,
It is interesting to see where you work and also given me a few ideas for my set up!
Hello Tunde,
Yes thats where I do my work most of the time. The rods are laboratory stands with clamps attached by bosses. I work for a school and I bought them through the school!
Regards to you all
Mark
@Babuci - Hehe - yeah, very often I get caught up in "I need to get this" when my wife will be quick to point out "can't you use THAT?" ...oh yeah....
Went out and bought a whole bunch of clamps - my wife points pout we had a bag of clothspins...
Bought a couple of wide strips of muslin and asked my lovely wife if/when she could sew them together (because I can't even sew a button back onto a shirt!) to make one big white sheet - she reaches right into the linen closet and pulls out white bedsheets we don't use...
Oooookay... I'll look around the house more...
-Lew ;-)
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I've been curious as to the conditions that my fellow contributors work in when working at home for sometime so I thought I'd pluck up the courage and ask.
Here is my work space at home (the kitchen table) with my wife working on her degree in the background.
My "studio" has been cobbled together over the last few months and is basic but I get some interesting results from it.