How To Take High Quality Product Images For Your Website
You will need:
1 Digital Camera of around 2-3 megapixels with attachments such
as USB cable, software, etc.
1 Telescopic Tripod (not the expensive one, the $20 wal-mart 4
footer is fine)
1 or 2 Craft foam boards, color of your choice, white is best
1 clamp on type light with 75 wt bulb knife, tape, etc.
This little mini studio works great for small items up to 12" x
12" or so. First get familiar with your camera, find the macro
(close) mode and get it screwed onto the tripod. Build a box 24"
square using the foam board and razor knife, but leave one wall
out so you wind up with a 3 sided box with top and bottom. Tape
the panels together neatly with clear packing tape, avoiding any
gaps or scraggly edges. Find a place out of the way and sit the
box up level with the lens of the camera, which is on it's
adjustable tripod. Insert your product into the box and center
it on the floor of the box. You'll now need your light, turn it
on and begin experimenting with different light angels.
Depending on the desired effect, you have about 1,000 possible
light variations on the same exact product. I take pictures of
cigars, so clarity of the cigar wrapper is key, but even the
most beautiful and supple wrapper can look bad in the wrong
angle of light. The cigar bands are also a consideration, since
many of them are foil coated and shiny. You don't want a glare,
but at the same time you want to promote the brightness and
color. A light from directly above the cigars brings out a
bright, highly detailed image of the wrapper, but casts shadows
down the cigar a mile long of even the smallest bump...making
the cigar wrapper look less attractive than with the naked eye,
certainly not the purpose when trying to sell a product to a
customer via photos. A light from either side makes the cigar
bands glare one sided which just doesn't work. I have found that
the best placement of the item is about 1/3 of the way into the
foam box, camera at dead center of the item(most digitals have
cross hair type markers for easy alignment), and the light just
about a foot above the camera shining down at a 45 degree angle
onto the object(this method does require light from the camera's
flash as well as the mobile light source, so make sure you have
the flash enabled). Experiment moving the light farther and
farther away until the images turn out the brightness you
prefer. For me it's about 18-24".
Now you can upload your images to your computer and open them
into a photo editor like adobe photoshop or my favorite, Ulead
Photo Express. This program will actually straighten and crop
your images in 2 clicks. Resize your image and keep in mind that
the larger the picture and more detail you want, the slower the
image will load once online. I usually save for the web at
around 350 x 200 pixels with an overall file size of 15k. You
can manipulate the save as quality under the settings feature of
the software. A few swipes of the white, fuzzy edged brush to
mask any shadows or other imperfections on the nearly seamless
white background, adjust the brightness if necessary, increase
the sharpness by 1-2 degrees, and name/save your photo ie.
book.jpg
book.jpg is now ready for publishing on the web. One last tip,
if you want tiny thumb nails versions of your products, just
momentarily resize the image down to 75 pixels tall and save it
as the same filename but add a small "s" for small to the
beginning of the filename ie. sbook.jpg, which simplifies the
html code writing process immensely. You can write the link and
image src code with the same exact image name, just with an
added s where you want the thumbnail image to appear. Make the
thumbnail the link to the full sized image by using the "a href"
attribute around the "s" thumbnail, and you re done. Make sure
you add "click here for larger image" or something to that
effect so your customers know for sure the larger image is
available. Your customers will thank you for the ease of
navigation.