Very nice - good shots. Thanks for sharing your setup as well, that's very nice of you!
thanks, and ithought that would be handy if someone wanted to give some tips, then they could see what i've done and correct me if they have a better idea
Hi Stanley,
Both of your pictures are very nice, but for me your 1st picture is very nice indeed.
It looks like you have a nice set up there and there can be no denying you know how to use it.
I look forward to seeing more of your work.
Well done.
This really is very nice but I've still got some questions.
What is producing the smoke?
Please explain you're lighting in more detail. I see the contraption on the right. Is that the flash that you mentioned behind the cardboard? If so, what purpose does the cardboard serve?
Is the light on the left a continuous light?
Stanley - been a while since I've posted here (heaps of distractions recently) but your post prompted me. Have a look at the below link for some other suggestions of what you can do. I posted some smoke photos in my (long abandoned) project 52 thread about 1/2 way down the page.
Project 52 by Peter
hi mike,
the thing that is producing the smoke is an incense stick, i found that they give the nicest smoke and they smell not to bad to
the lighting is very simple: the lamp on the left is just a normal desk lamp (continuous light) and on the right behind the cardboard stood a flash on a wireless trigger, the cardboard was used to make sure i didn't get any lensflare. because i was moving around and didn't set my camera on a tripod.
hoped it helped, blow is a picture that explains my set-up
https://www.dropbox.com/s/i4uhkhwmgo54xhl/share.png
Last edited by stanleydegraaf; 4th December 2012 at 07:15 AM. Reason: picture wasn't showing so just used the link
i just looked them up and the're very nice,
for the white background did you just invert the black background?
your set-up was very similair to that from my, only you used a reflector and i a lamp.
(i think i am gonna try a white background on some of my photo's to)
thank you for the inspiration
I inverted the photo in GIMP. Then added a layer for the colourisation.
A. Great set of images, especially for a first attempt - well done.
Thank you, Stanley, for the more detailed explanation. Now I get it.
Thank you also to Peter for your Project 52 thread about doing this.