Product shots are almost always close-ups of small things, and when shooting close, depth of field often will not cover the entire scene. Not that we always would want everything in focus, but there are occasions where objects that are desired to be in focus are not at the same distance from the camera.
So, I am playing around, getting used to my equipment, and when I recently made a few quick shots of the flosser that I hacked to accommodate regular floss instead of the discontinued Oral-B Hummingbird flosser heads that are no longer available. To us folks who have got used this gadget, the lack of flosser heads is frustrating.
I made a few quick ones, with the lens in its normal position, but as they are shot a bit from above, everytning except the top of the flosser is farther away, but I wanted focus on the unchanged flosser head as well as the bight of floss at the foot of the flosser.
I guess photographers sometimes are a bit crazy. The first shot I made was good enough to show what was made, although I noticed when using it with Johnson & Johnson floss, that a thinner floss would be better, more like the original one for the Hummingbird. But there was also another thing with the first shot, that it did not show the surface of the rubber on the handle. I wanted a bit more light there, stroking the surface, so I made a second one with a mirror to accentuate the contour of the right side.
Then I was disappointed by the appearance of the bight of floss in front at the foot of the flosser, so I attached the lens to my tilt adapter and shot another one with upward tilt. Thus I got the floss head at the right within the depth of field, as well as the bight of floss in front, while the floss container remained out of focus and the entire flosser gadget is in focus. The sun was shining, but now I think I have got the hang of it, so I'll leave it for a while and I don't know whether to seek perfection. After all, it's just a photo to show that I adapted the flosser head to accept regular floss. I did so by cutting notches at the tips of the prongs, and putting a screw at the crotch of the fork, where the floss is wound a few turns, taken over the tips through the notches and back to the screw where it is again wound some turns to fix it.
So the floss head now can be reused indefinitely.
The first shot I made was taken in window-light without fussing around with modifiers.
Then the second one, with a mirror to accentuate the contour and make the rubber surface visible.
Now the third one, taken this morning with the sun shining, which creates different effects and shadows, still with a mirror to the right, but this time with the lens tilted upward, focusing also on the loose floss head and the bight of floss at the foot of the flosser.