So, I was guess-timating without benefit of a clean measurement, but now you've gone and tossed down the gauntlet and I had to measure: I would tell you, but you would get counterspace envy and then the head gardener would have to purchase you a new kitchen...I am doing you a favor by holding back this information.
The area I really want for my studio is the dining room which sits at a 45 degree angle to the north afternoon sun and has two very large window areas on two sides. It measures out at 12 x 14. But alas, there are others who see to want to eat there on a regular basis,,,sighhhhhh.
Some years ago for an ad project, after not getting the result I wanted photographically, I laid a transparent plastic sheet on a scanner bed, sliced fruit and vegetables, placed them on the sheet, pressing a bit on each to eliminate bubbles, and scanned them. The scans were fabulous and I used them for the project. If I could find the images would post them for you.
Thanks for that Dave I appreciate your efforts , it looks good....and Bear I hope you find these shots for us.
Sharon
May I ask how you set this up and shot it. I can't work it out from looking at the shot.
Hi Rob, of course you can!
I was using my trusty 2 sq feet of kitchen space... windows at 12 oclock and 8 oclock to the subject. Black fabric background. macro flash ring and a small lamp. I stuck the bottom of slice in the narrow neck of a whisky tasting glass to hold it upright and shot the upper part cropped out the glass in PP and then rotated the image so it appeared suspended which I found looked better.
I ran an ice cube over the surface of the cucumber evry couple of shots to keep it fresh looking. Works a lot better than water.
Thanks, Sharon. So, you had the black fabric hung up behind the cucumber, but the light was coming over the top? I just couldn't work out how that rim lighting was appearing on the left - but it was really the top before you rotated it?
I'll have a go at this later.
Would you like to borrow my vegetable peeler?
This is a possibility to get the lighting I think you are after that could help you get the proper backlighting. I've used something similar to this (albeit in a bit larger area and with proper lightboxes, but this should still work quite well) for product shots many many many years ago. Instead of windows, I used scrimmed lights or soft-boxes but even with your window setup, you should be able to use some simple plastic sheeting to block any direct light.
Recently, I've discovered how far you can take a piece of plastic and some 1" diameter PVC with a few right angle connectors.
lol
Chris,that set up is very interesting ...thanks for putting so much work into it.
The fun thing about this setup is that you can put colored gels inside the glass on one side and get some interesting color effects. As a high school teacher with a limited budget, one must get very inventive. I use clear glass graduates that I generally use to mix chemicals in. They are 4-6 inches in diameter and upward to 18 inches in height, though for this shot, I would use something in the 12 inch range, I think.