JohnE Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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jitubats wrote:
After looking at these shots I am even ashamed of showing my studio.
It looks hopeless.
...
I have a question though ?
Where can i get a seamless background which is not paper, i tried muslin but it gets all those crevices, and my paper somehow gets torn all the time.
Also what is background light, is it behind the muslin or i just put two umbrellas in front of the paper and overexpose it by two stops just to get a differentiation. I asked couple of people, but no one seemed to give me a consistent answer.
Thanks,
Jitesh
Hi Jitesh.
Your studio looks better than mine! :-)
Almost any material can be used for a background. Go to a fabric store and purchase bulk material and any length and color. Goto to Home Depot or Menards or some place like that and purchase wall panels, etc.
As for your seamless paper tearing,,, many of us use a sheet of clear plexiglas on top of the seamless paper to prevent it from being torn. There are some nice examples in this (lengthy) thread on different ways people have come up with to deal with flooring issues.
For background lights, I typically use one or two Alien Bee 800's. If I'm trying to get a solid color (i.e., white) background, I use white umbrellas on the AB's which floods the background evenly with light. Sometime's I add a 20, 30 or 40 degree grid to the 7" AB reflector which gives me a nice spotlight on the background.
Use a clothing steamer to remove wrinkles from background materials. (Their typically less than $50.)
If you want to use a material on the background and don't want the wrinkles (or the wrinkles won't come out with a steamer), then make sure you move the model 6, 8 or 10 feet way from the background and shoot at f4 or so, which will help to ensure a blurred background.
You can also blur the background in Photoshop afterwords. (There's a thread here that I submitted that provides step-bystep instructions with some visuals aids on how to do this.)
Here's the blurred background tutorial...
Blurring the background tutorial
Maybe this will help...
Here's the image without retouching...

This image shows the marching ants after I've drawn a line around the model with the Lasso Tool.

Once the line is drawn around the model, choose "Select" from the menu and then "Inverse". Then choose "Layer" for the menu, then "New" and finally "Layer via Copy". You should end up with this...

Make sure you are on the blur layer!
Now choose "Filter" from the menu, then "Blur" then "Gausian Blur" and set the radius at somewhere between 70 and 90 and hit the OK button. This is what you should see...

Now notice the blur overlaps the models edges in the following shot...

Select the eraser tool and set the Opacity to 100% and the flow to 100% and choose the desired brush size. Make sure that you choose a brush with blurred edges (not a sharp edge!).
Use the eraser to remove (erase) the blur that overlaps the model, like this...

When done, the image should look something like this...

I hope this helps to clarify the process.
With many thanks to Deiree!
Kind regards,
John
Edited on Dec 22, 2007 at 04:13 AM
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