Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How can I take a clear picture of the product? The camera used in our company is Canon 6D. The product to be photographed is a wig.

How can I take a clear picture of the product? The camera used in our company is Canon 6D. The product to be photographed is a wig.

When you shoot your hair, the effect of glossy oil is mainly due to the good lighting arrangement (i.e. "lighting") at the shooting site. Go to Taobao to buy a studio lamp for shooting still life, that is, a black quadrangular cone-shaped cover (with a studio lamp of 2-4W inside) and a very high tripod below. Buy two, put one on the left and one on the right, and illuminate the wig, each 2-3 meters away from the wig (you and the camera shoot in the middle of the two lights).

at the same time, buy a white or light gray background cloth and distribute it on the background cloth.

secondly, the camera can't vibrate when the shutter is pressed. Use a tripod and a cable release (set to delay shooting for 2 seconds or 5 seconds before pressing the shutter, and leave the camera quickly after pressing the shutter).

then shooting: when the background cloth is white, the exposure is increased by 1/3 or 2/3.

when taking photos in aperture priority mode, the f value is generally set to 5.6 or 6 (the shutter speed is automatically set by the camera according to the light and aperture value). Adjust the size of the aperture, that is, set the F value (the larger the aperture, the smaller the F value; If the aperture is small, the F value will be large). See the camera manual for details on how to change the F value.

if you want your hair to fill the viewfinder (that is, the mode of taking a big head), use the macro function. Canon 6D has a macro.

if you want to use photoshop for post-processing (for example, adjust the color scale and contrast), shoot in RAW format (photos in RAW format are original data for post-processing).

= = sufficient light, aperture priority mode, after focusing, the camera does not vibrate when the shutter is pressed, and generally no post-processing is needed.