JimInOz
路路Melbourne AustraliaI'm sure it's a beautiful country and 99% of the population are good honest people, but I'd leave ANY reference to Peru out of the photos Jonathon.
Just my "tip o'the day".
馃榿
Just my "tip o'the day".
馃榿
I'm sure it's a beautiful country and 99% of the population are good honest people, but I'd leave ANY reference to Peru out of the photos Jonathon.
Just my "tip o'the day".
馃榿
Just messing around. I used my camera flash light to light the watch, while taking the pictures with another camera. Shows up a lot of detail on the dial.
View attachment 759825
The direct light creates glare...... Keep practicing. The more you do it the better you'll get at it.
Thankyou @Observer. D'you know.... (as a musician) I'm finding the, artistic, creativity involved in photography very enjoyable. Unfortunately, at the novice stage of things, it also gives birth to an element of frustration. 馃槦
at the novice stage of things
Your watch will have a bloke flyin' in and buying you a pint...............
You can use a smartphone camera effectively, but I got this for all around use. AMAZING macro capability, and great at capturing light nuances, especially low light. Huge 1" CMOS sensor. Very affordable.
Great advice already.
To reduce unwanted reflection and to get a more even look on reflective parts, like bezel inserts and crystals I will use a black piece of card stock taped to my phone. There's's a cutout in the black card for the camera lens to look through. You can get a nice even lighting look with no reflection of your fingers or your phone visible.
Just took this photo with my phone sitting next to a window.
This black card was taped to my phone which is one reason you can't see me, or my phone, or the interior of my house reflected in the crystal. 馃槈
Do you have a macro picture of a watch taken with this camera to share, please? Curious to see the result.