by fotodoug » Sat Jun 07, 2014 4:51 pm
Manual mode is actually easier to control...I thought you were in aperture priority! In manual you can control both the aperture and shutter speed independently. I'm not familiar with your camera, but usually there are two adjustment wheels close to the shutter trip button...one in front of the button, the other behind...one will control aperture, the other, the shutter. Using a remote is good...one less thing to worry about! I just did a little research, and cs2 doesn't image stack very well. I use cs5. There are image stacking programs out there that are free, but I haven't used them. If you aren't using image stacking, and using max f stop, you are kind of at the mercy of lighting conditions...unless you can bring extra light to balance the light behind the subject, with the light on the subject. You could buy a small, white, photo umbrella, and a bright, daylight balanced bulb...that might add enough balanced light to enhance your subject in early/late day sun (background). For example, when you set up your diorama, let's say the light on the background (like the mottled light in the trees) is f36 at 1/50 sec...but your diorama is in the shade, and the light on that is f36, 1/5 sec...that means you have to bring an additional 3 stops of light to your diorama to balance the scene. An additional light can do that, but you would need a power source. There are ways around the exposure problems...all of them take a lot of work. One is to take two exposures, one for the subject, one for the background. You use the two exposures together, but on different layers. This takes much longer because you have to erase much of one of the layers that isn't the exposure you want...ugh! The one that makes the most sense is the one that you would use if you were photographing a real car. You expose for the subject, and let the background go over exposed. That might cause a little flare, but it will look REAL, not perfect. The photos you are doing look like real cars, but if they were real cars, you would have different problems! The changes I made to your photos were only exposure and contrast. Curve adjustment comes later...when you are VERY picky about exposure on the scene...you can copy the same photo on a bunch of layers and change the curve on all of them in different ways...it's endless! Any of the shots I've done for these forums have had image stacking, colour correction, dust/crap removal, exposure, and contrast. Most of my cars are racers, not shelf queens. The only time I don't shoot with a lens shade is when it won't fit between the lens and the subject...use a lens shade!!!