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paully
11th May 2007, 15:39
Hello everyone i wonder if anyone may be able to help me.
I currently import natural stone tiles from italy and turkey and am in the process of setting up an online store.
other sites i have seen they have pictures of the stone with nothing else around them ie background.how is this achieved ?????
hope this makes sense and hope for a reply
paul
FunkyBears
11th May 2007, 16:57
Hi Paul,
I'm no expert but I think this is done in photoshop when the background is cut out and a transparent background applied. That way just the image shows on web page.
Paul
Christiane
11th May 2007, 17:11
I use Jasc Paint Shop Pro 8. You can crop the picture, go over the background with a brush, adjust the light, etc...
da8iwr
11th May 2007, 22:52
I would take close up images of the tile so you don't see the edges, only the texture and colour in the same way as they do with carpet and wallpaper. You don't need to see the tile edge unless its a set, but then i would just lay them out in a set and take a photograph in the same way.
Maybe do that with even non set tiles, lay them out as they would be on a wall and try different white balance settings and lamp positions to get the effect you are looking for.
If you want to set up your own mini studio, use a huge piece of card preferably brilliant white. If you can bend it (don't let it crease), it will be exactly how we do it in a studio with much more expensive equipment but basically the same principle. Bend it so you when you position the camera you cant see the edges of the card, then position the object in the curve of the card. Position the lights so that they don't glare at the object. I usually bend a piece of paper over the front of the lamp which gives it the diffuser effect that the pro lamps use. Just use any bed side or desk lamp but just be careful of the heat on the paper. Try and bend the paper as far away from the bulb as possible to avoid the heat, just make sure you turn them off when ever you walk away from the setup.
You can see these objects I photographed
http://www.quicktimevirtualreality.com/objects.html
The Flash gun and Engine component were photographed on my dining room table. If you have Quick Time installed you can see a virtual reality movie with all the images i took.
Don't look into blue screens or any other colour backgrounds as you get some thing called "radiosity", which is when the colour of the background actually reflects onto the object and then discolours the object that colour, which is more difficult to remove (without a lot of talent and good software) than if you just used a simple white background in the first place.
After all that above, you wont need to cut them out, as the image will be right first time :o)
Hope this helps
Ian
sirearl
12th May 2007, 01:40
You have a choice of photoshop,Fireworks,and many more.
Use the magic wand tool to cut the background out.
then save as a gif image selecting alpha transparecy
gnaldrett
12th May 2007, 08:23
If you are doing the photography yourself, it may be worth investing in a lightbox. I am sure it was a topic in ukbf before, can't remember where though.
Basically (warning non-photographer typing!) it is a specially designed box that is white inside, and has multiple filtered lights shining inside. The camera is attached and you end up with an image that is either ready for use, or requires minimal editing in your graphics app.
Try googling them, depending on the size of your subject they are reasonably priced. I looked at them a while back while looling into a project idea.
Hope this helps...
Gordon
da8iwr
12th May 2007, 15:51
The only problem with a light box, is that it silhouettes the object, as the light coming from behind is brighter than the light being bounced of the object from your lighting.
Not sure if you mean light tent like this
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=170111054523
Also this seams like a good starter kind of mini studio here
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270117618550
Regards
Ian
gnaldrett
12th May 2007, 18:10
Not sure if you mean light tent like this
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=170111054523
Also this seams like a good starter kind of mini studio here
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270117618550
These are exactly what I meant, sorry not a box!
Thanks for the correction...
Regards,
Gordon
websage
13th May 2007, 15:19
Are you thinking of having a 'tile' or stone background for each product (thus providing an almost lifesize impression of the tiles you offer)?
Or were you thinking of just a single stone effect for the whole site?
The first idea might be quite good to give a real impression of individual lines that a small image might fail to achieve -- but will require coding for each page
The second is easier because it will be part of the template code -- but (personally) I think this looks naff and 'old fashioned' - will need some thought not to be just a distracting element from what is better (imho) to be a clean monotone background.
Just a thought
Al
websage
Blush
14th May 2007, 18:58
I know this isn't very technical, but I place items inside a spotless clean white bath!
Although I do use photoshop also, but my skills are limited there.
karan
20th May 2007, 18:55
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Regards
Karan