





Moderators: Zahru II, Bragallot, RedRover, Natalya







Zupponn wrote:All you have to do is flatten his head.Colette wrote:You're free to make your own map from scratch, however.
Silverdream wrote:TL;DR Be like Scratch.
Captain-Camper wrote:tl;dr I'm just going to assume don't be like voin and be more like scratch.

In my recent experience, for small to medium builds an A3 sheet of card (pick a neutral/complementary colour) makes a ridiculous difference to how fancy you can make your photos look. Srsly guys, go get a sheet of card.Zahru II wrote:I use a large sheet of cardboard, it's pretty simple. The rest of it is just lighting and not getting "out of frame".

I need to do this. Any recommendations on good lighting methods to those who do not have much access to natural lighting?ikensall wrote:In my recent experience, for small to medium builds an A3 sheet of card (pick a neutral/complementary colour) makes a ridiculous difference to how fancy you can make your photos look. Srsly guys, go get a sheet of card.Zahru II wrote:I use a large sheet of cardboard, it's pretty simple. The rest of it is just lighting and not getting "out of frame".




Hey! This is really helpful, makes me realise that I could take much better photos if I put my mind to it!Quantumsurfer wrote:I built a lightbox for really cheap.
Here's how I get my pictures clean:
SpoilerShowThen, you just get two, preferably three, normal bendy desk lamps and place them all so that the light shines through the white cloth into the box. Two side and one top, in order of necessity. Try to angle the lights such that they eliminate the most shadow cast from the other lights.
- Cardboard box of medium size
- cut out square holes in every side except bottom and back
- tape/glue matte white poster board to bottom and back, such that it curves and does not fold in the bottom corner
- tape thin white cloth, stretched tight, over all holes in box except front
Check the micro specifications for your camera. Mine's an older, shittier digital camera so I need to take pictures from 9 or more inches away (of small things like lego and miniatures and such). Your picture will probably come out shitty. Don't worry about it. Load the picture into photoshop or some similar photo editing program, crop it, and adjust the white balance. I use PS, so I'm not sure how to do this in other progs without looking it up. In PS, though, it's Image>Adjustments>Levels. Select the white eyedropper and click in the white space of the photo. You can adjust the sliders/click elsewhere as needed to get the whiteness to explode. This might wash out the figure, so bring up the grays and blacks slightly. Done, professional looking picture, easier than it sounds.
Yoink!Quantumsurfer wrote:I built a lightbox for really cheap.
Natalya wrote:Wtf is going on in this thread?