Recommendation
Posted: 19.10.2013 08:45
Hi,
Shooting jewelry has several problems. The surface of jewel is mirror and gems lose their sparkle easy. And of course, focus needs stacking. I have a photographer in Hong Kong who delivers me stacked (and Photoshopped) images like this.http://www.suokko.fi/tuote/diamonfire-- ... 114-1-082/ This is rhodium plated silver ring with cubic Zirconia. I dont have me diamond rings up loaded yet, but they are similar quality. My problem is the gems are not shoving their best. HDR is one solution to get better images on gems.
Here is a pic I like http://www.chowtaifook.com/en/node/8951 the diamond has more life, colors, and is very sharp looking.
Rings are typically 2-3 cm long objects. Should I start shooting with Macro rail or use only EDoF? I have Canon 7D but for best image quality I can upgrade camera.
I only yesterday found out your program and realized I can combine HDR and EDoF. I am sure my photographer in Hong Kong do not shoot HDR.
Shooting jewelry has several problems. The surface of jewel is mirror and gems lose their sparkle easy. And of course, focus needs stacking. I have a photographer in Hong Kong who delivers me stacked (and Photoshopped) images like this.http://www.suokko.fi/tuote/diamonfire-- ... 114-1-082/ This is rhodium plated silver ring with cubic Zirconia. I dont have me diamond rings up loaded yet, but they are similar quality. My problem is the gems are not shoving their best. HDR is one solution to get better images on gems.
Here is a pic I like http://www.chowtaifook.com/en/node/8951 the diamond has more life, colors, and is very sharp looking.
Rings are typically 2-3 cm long objects. Should I start shooting with Macro rail or use only EDoF? I have Canon 7D but for best image quality I can upgrade camera.
I only yesterday found out your program and realized I can combine HDR and EDoF. I am sure my photographer in Hong Kong do not shoot HDR.