Photography Newbie - lens positioning and lighting
Posted: Mon May 07, 2018 12:02 am
Hi,
I was looking through the impressive artwork in a few Matchbox catalogues, and noticed that a lot of it was drawn as though you're looking at the cars from underneath or ground-level. Here's an example from 1971:
It seems to have the effect of making the cars look larger, so I tried to take photos of a few my models as though they were life-size cars, although I don't know much about photography. The photos below were taken with a smartphone (no DSLR yet) , with the lens about an inch off the floor. The first batch of photos were taken in natural light as the sun was setting.
When the natural light had faded too much, I used a bedside table lamp from about 5 feet away from the model to try to mimic a sunset effect.
I picked models with warm paint colours - yellow / red / gold. I've cropped the photos, but not too much as i wanted a sense of wide-open space. I haven't adjusted anything else after I uploaded them.
Enjoyed doing this - Any tips / feedback would be good
Cheers
John
I was looking through the impressive artwork in a few Matchbox catalogues, and noticed that a lot of it was drawn as though you're looking at the cars from underneath or ground-level. Here's an example from 1971:
It seems to have the effect of making the cars look larger, so I tried to take photos of a few my models as though they were life-size cars, although I don't know much about photography. The photos below were taken with a smartphone (no DSLR yet) , with the lens about an inch off the floor. The first batch of photos were taken in natural light as the sun was setting.
When the natural light had faded too much, I used a bedside table lamp from about 5 feet away from the model to try to mimic a sunset effect.
I picked models with warm paint colours - yellow / red / gold. I've cropped the photos, but not too much as i wanted a sense of wide-open space. I haven't adjusted anything else after I uploaded them.
Enjoyed doing this - Any tips / feedback would be good
Cheers
John