|
How do I
take my pictures?
Well there are two ways to go - high res digital camera (I love this
way because you can immediately see and use your photos!) :-) New digital
cameras are coming out so fast these days you can't keep up with them!
So go get the highest resolution digital camera you can and get going!
or a regular camera - develop film/scann in at high res - then edit.
Here's my take on digital cameras (a layman's guide to digital cameras
written in everyday language -whoohoo!!) :-)
In short - get the best digital camera you can afford, be happy. Go
home and take great pics of your minis - be happy some more :-)
Now here's the longer version :-)
As far as the camera goes they are making so many new ones it's hard
to keep up - but go out there and get the one with the highest resolution
that you can afford and call it a day :-) most of these digital cameras
have some sort of small card that stores the images (now these are pricey
but think of it as all the film you'll ever ever ever use and suddenly
it's a great buy :-) anywho - the more storage on the card, the more
images you can store. But remember it works like this, you can take like
200 small pics on a card, or a dozen super high detail pics :-)
you'll also be getting two sets of rechargable batteries, and
battery charger, a tripod (digital cameras don't tolerate shaking well).
umm - oh, you'll need a way to get the digital images from
your camera to the computer. nowadays there are many different ways to
do this - just ask the sales wonk what's newest and fastest, then ask the
price - if it's too high proceed to the second best - repeat process until
we have a winner :-)
mine is an Olympus C-2500L and I wish everyone could
have one :-) it's fancier than I'll ever be fully able to understand,
but I'll keep trying :-)
the big secret to it all is that if you begin with a giant
graphic that looks good the picture really stays pretty darn sharp when
you resize it down a few notches (to the "big" web picture, then resize
that down to the thumbnail (sharp image getting smaller so it stays pretty
clear) and whammo you have your thumbnail - and you're done :-)
I hope this helps you my friend! I think I'll copy this and post
it in the "how I do graphics" part of my site :-) maybe it'll help
others as well :-)
Glory to the Emperor and Sanguinius ~ Brother Edward
Taking Good Pictures
Making good minis is the hardest part of all this, but taking a good
photo is another new challenge. By far the greatest issue you will face
is one of lighting - lighting (in a word) blows... (sorry) different lights
make different kind of light quite literally. I'll leave out the eight
zillion things NOT to do, and I'll tell you what TO do :-) first
- get a floorlamp (the kind that shines light up on the ceiling) and put
a nice warm "true color" lightbulb in there. Many places that sell lightbulbs
these days have these "true light" or "natural light" kind of bulbs that
seek to provide you with more "natural" light - use these every chance
you get. If you do, the pics will come out looking pretty much the same
color as you see with your eye - use regular lights and I'll bet your pics
come out looking a bit bleached (bad light). And another thing - notice
I mentioned the light should shine up on the ceiling? Yep - don't shine
the light on your minis - that just makes freakishly harsh shadows and
screws up your picture. So good light, shined away from your mini (up on
the ceiling, or bounced off of a nearby wall will do just fine. What
else?
Background - I've found that having a nice background really helps an
image a lot. Even if it's just a piece of black felt (which works great
by the way) it makes the mini the central focus of the image (aka people
aren't trying to figure out what other minis you have there in the background!)
:-)
Emotion - some minis are striking really dramatic poses - try to do
something with that, is the guy coming at you? or is he about to assault
someone else - try to imagine yoiu're making a movie and think of a fun
camera shot that does your hero justice :-)
Camera angle - this is my single best discovery - shooting up at the
minis makes it look like they are "lifesize", and makes the images really
fun :-) Give it a shot sometime and see how you like it! :-)
Okay - now we have the images - what next?
Image Editing
Well however big my original image is (different resolutions
render different size images - I'm using a digital camera but you get the
same thing when you scan your photos in if you go with that option) I then
crop down to just the portion I'm most interested in - then I resize down
to 600pixels on the longest side (as I save it I reduce the file quality
to about 135k - Photoshop6 (and PhotoImpact 6) both have the handy ability
to edit image quality so you can shrinkthe file size down to a nicer more
web friendly size. Sure my graphics are still big, but they work alright
for cablemodem users, and as the purpose of this site is to promote the
raft of detailed modeling (as pertains to 40K) I figure the heavy graphics
are worth it :-)
Now - on with the show!
This 600pixel wide (or tall) image is now my "full" size image - then
I make a 150 to 200pixel max dimension image which will be my thumbnail
image - I put that one on my page - with an option for people to click
on the image to access the "full" size image :-)
I hope this helps!
also take a peek at this
http://www.dakkadakka.com/events.htm
they have many many photographs which may help you gain a feel for
what kind of angles/lighting are better than others :-)
happy image making! ~ Brother Edward
|