eBay Pictures (help related)
Jonny_Paycheck
17,825 Posts
I have tried a million different ways to get the good pics for my auctions. but nothing seems to work. If I use a flash, I get a huge reflection that obscures the actual object. If I don't, I get a murky, overexposed blur of a picture.I'm no photographer; I'm working with an entry-level digital camera.I've tried all kinds of angles: flat on the desk, standing up against some books, in the expedit cube, on the chair, angled against the chair's back... bright light in back, bright light in front, no light at all... nothing.Can any one of you photographically inclined dudes help a bruh out? Especially those of you who take real snazzy eBay picskthxbai
Comments
Yup, good lighting is the key.
My problem is my shitty Canon scanner. It scans any labels that are black/white and makes them a terrible yellow and I have to remove the color in Photoshop for it to work.
http://www.soulstrut.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=1040115&an=0&page=1#Post1040115
The angle/flash thing is OK, but on laminated covers and jackets still in the shrink it doesn't help much.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the input.
This is how I always did it too. Worked well.
the k doe is in shrink and a sleeve...
yeah, those laminated covers can be a bitch, but there is a sweet spot angle wise...as you know, it might take a dozen or so takes, but the sweet spot will make itself known..
the shooting-at-an-angle (with flash) thing, and add that
if you are having problems getting the proper angle, often
shooting from a low angle from the bottom up will get a
good lens-flare free shot ... also, the idea of using the
zoom will reduce glare but you also lose a signifigant
amount of resolution doing that, and the image will most
likely be grainy.
I think I've got it worked out.
JP: As others have suggested, the first thing you need is a tripod and you don't want a flash. The problem with a lot of digital cameras is that they aren't made for low light situations, hence the blur. You can still get around this by finding some place in the shop or wherever where there's not a big honking lightbulb that's going to reflect off the cover. Then set up your tripod and camera and just use ambient light - your camera, ideally, will adjust to the light level and expose properly and the tripod will help prevent blur.
If you really want to prevent blur - set the timer on your camera. That way, the camera won't shake by you pressing the shutter button to begin with. If you were a real baller, I'd suggest getting a remote shutter but that's overkill in this situation.