Thanks, your reply makes me feel good, because I do not feel like I have 
much to offer since this became a digital list.

Probably the best thing I can tell you is get Calumet's full catalog it 
has all kinds of things in it for the product photographer you did not 
know existed. Probably have to call them, I think if you order it off 
the web they will just send you the flyers.

You might want to see if you can not find a good book on "Product 
Photography", unfortunately I do not know of anything currently in 
print. Not saying there is not, I just have not been keeping up. Seems 
like there should be something for this digital age out there.

-graywolf


Feroze wrote:
> That has to be the coolest thing I've seen so far for products, thanks. 
> What other pearls of wisdom can you pass on....
> 
> graywolf wrote:
>> Studio types us what is called dulling spray. Here is a link:
>>
>> http://www.calumetphoto.com/item/BR1115/
>>
>>
>>
>> Feroze wrote:
>>   
>>> Hi Don,
>>>
>>> Shiny gold and silver are even harder :) My main problems at the moment 
>>> are eliminating the reflections of the light stands, the camera, me on 
>>> very shiny gold bands, hence the light tent. Please explain how you set 
>>> the WB from the fabric. WB is my bug bear at the moment. Its driving me 
>>> nuts. As for composition, I have a pair of 150W studio lights and just 
>>> use the modeling lights to check for shadows. However I am not carrying 
>>> around all this equipment, I have to look at these florescent lights
>>>
>>> Feroze
>>>
>>> Don Sanderson wrote:
>>>     
>>>> Hi Feroze.
>>>> I too use the EZ-Cube with 3 cheap compact florescents in white reflectors.
>>>> These bulbs were $15.00 US for the 3 and last a very long time.
>>>> I set manual WB once from the white material of the cube and haven't had
>>>> to reset it in well over 2 years. I shoot strictly jpegs for eekBay stuff.
>>>> Daylight balanced bulbs are a bit more money but would allow you to shoot
>>>> with a preset, rather than manual, WB. Auto WB has never worked well for
>>>> me in this application.
>>>> The biggest advantage to this (vs flash) is being able to see, and
>>>> eliminate,
>>>> shadows before exposure. Since my items are all different colors, shapes 
>>>> and
>>>> sizes, this saves me a LOT of time.
>>>>
>>>> The results are consistently very good, here's an example of a difficult
>>>> 'subject':
>>>> http://www.donsauction.com/PDML/Super-A.jpg
>>>> Shiny, all black cameras with just a bit of chrome are very hard to shoot.
>>>>
>>>> Don
>>>>
>>>>   
>>>>       
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
>>>>> Feroze
>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2007 7:17 PM
>>>>> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>>>>> Subject: Light Tent / Box
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I've bought this : http://www.ezcube.com/. I'm trying to build a little
>>>>> portable kit where I can go to the customer and shoot his jewellery,
>>>>> some of their insurance dose not apply off the premises and some are
>>>>> just to valuable to move around (I don't want to take the risk). Would a
>>>>> normal flash (I have one fgz360 so far) be suitable as a light source
>>>>> for this? Daylight bulbs are very hard to get here, and I'm really
>>>>> struggling to get a proper WB on my K10D so I'm trying to avoid
>>>>> florescent or other light sources.
>>>>>
>>>>> I can't test it as its still in transit, tought I get the rest of the
>>>>> stuff together....
>>>>>
>>>>> Your advice and past experiences is highly appreciated.
>>>>>
>>>>> Feroze
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
>>>>>     
>>>>>         
>>>>   
>>>>       
>>>     
>>   
> 

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