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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    7

    Product Photography-which camera

    Hi Everyone,

    I'm new to the forum so hello to all. I would like some advice on which camera to buy. I'm a graphic designer and will soon be doing some photography for an online clothing store. The quality of the photos needs to be good and I would like a clean look (something like the product shots on www.howies.co.uk & http://www.endclothing.co.uk/ ) and I think my current Coolpix 4600 might be out of its depth!
    There will also need to be quite close up shots of the details of the garments, like zips etc.

    I'm pretty much a novice on photography and realise that a lot more goes into good shots than the camera , but I want to make sure I have a piece of kit that will suit the task, while I develop my skills.

    Budget

    The budget is pretty low. I am hoping to spend around 300-400 pounds (about 700 USD). It would be great if there is something suitable for less, but also if I need to spend a bit more there is some flexibility. It sounds like I will need to buy lights, tripod and remote as well so any saving would be welcome.

    Size

    Size doesn't matter one bit for this.

    Features


    I'm not sure what I will need in terns of zoom- I think a macro feature might be good in terms of the garment close ups.
    Image quality is important - maybe an 8 on 10!
    Manual controls might be useful to help me lean about the camera.

    General Usage

    The use will be for product shots indoors. It would be great to be able to use outdoors on model shots but its not a priority.
    I don't really need large prints as its for the web- again being a graphic designer it would be handy some times but that would be a bonus rather than a need. No action or sports shots would be necessary.


    I'm not over keen on Canon and so far I have looked at Sony DSC-H2 and the
    Nikon 5400

    Thanks in advance. Its great to be able to get advice that's not from a sales person.

    Paulo

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    WI
    Posts
    1,975
    It doesn't sound like you need a lot of zoom so I'm not sure why the H2 is on your list. As you said, you need a good macro camera.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    7
    Thanks Bascom,

    Could you recommend something suitable for the budget?

    Thx.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    8,163
    Quote Originally Posted by Paulo
    Thanks Bascom,

    Could you recommend something suitable for the budget?

    Thx.
    A Canon A530 (less than $200USD) would do you fine. Product photography is all about lighting.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    301
    While a superzoom is not needed for close up product shots, its always nice to have a camera that is not limited to just the one thing.

    Who knows, you may want to use the camera for your holidays or some nice nature photography, birding or macro work etc.

    In that case why not buy the Sony H1, currently £175 at argos?

    Takes excellent photos on full auto while you learn and has full manual controls as you learn your way.
    Comes complete with batteries, charger, adapter tube (for mounting tcons, wcons, and filters)

    http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Produc...er/5603488.htm

    And of course the £175 price will leave you plenty of money for extras.

    A 1gb memory stick pro duo from 7dayshop.com, for £29, for instance.
    Last edited by Sintares; 08-12-2006 at 01:23 PM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    7
    Hi Sintares,

    Thanks for the info.
    That does look a really good deal and would give me some other options in terms of use of the camera. There are a few things that might not work out great- I cant find a remote release for the Sony. I have heard you can buy bracketed third party ones but do they work ok?

    Also it says that it has 'One push White Balance Settings' which Im not sure if this is actual manual, which I think I would need.

    Other than that it looks great- and Im just around the corner from an Argos!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    367
    I'd recomend something with a hot shoe so you can use studio lights if you get into that sort of thing. A basic studio lighting setup can consist of something as simple as a hot shoe mounted flash on a light stand with a photo umbrella and one of those snakey coiley pc sync cables running to a hotshoe to pc converter adapter fitted onto the cameras hot shoe. That's what i use for any studio work i do. I have an fz30 with a hot shoe, and everyone will scream "noise" at me if i recomend it to you but you said the pictures will be resized for web viewing and with studio lighting you can use iso 80 which is pretty smooth on that camera. Also with a longer telephoto lens it zooms into small areas very well. I've used mine for some macro work with great success. The fz20 might be a better option since you won't need the extra 3 megapixels and it can be had for a lot cheaper these days. Also the fz30 supports raw format while the fz20 doesn't but that's your call whether you need it or not. Usually with studio type work the lighting is controllable thus once you find the in camera settings that suit you, you're all set. Good luck on your purchase. I'm not sure if any other point and shoots have a hot shoe or not and i don't think you'll want to bump up to a dslr with that price range... maybe a couple of the fuji s series would be something to look at too. The fz20 and 30 have shutter release cables too but they aren't wireless, was that a requirement?

    For everything you're looking at maybe 30 bucks for an umbrella, 20 or 30 for a basic light stand, 80ish for a flash, 15-20 or so for a hot shoe adapter for the light stand, 10 for a coil cord, 5 for the hotshoe adapter 25 for the shutter release and of course about 350 bucks for an fz20. All in all you're looking at about 550 or so for all that crap. If you wanna go all out, get two light stands, two flashes, two hotshoe mounts for that flash and use wireless flash releases to fire em both. Wireless flash releases are like 30 bucks or so a piece and then you just double your stand cost and subtract the hot shoe to pc adapter and coil cord thingy and that brings you to ABOUT 700 bucks plus shipping for everything and that'll set you up pretty sweet. These are ballpark estimates based on what i paid and when i did the math i used the worst case scenario. I'm sur eyou could find some of this stuff cheaper by shopping around and using ebay for some of it. Just my opinion though. :-)
    Last edited by BonjiB; 08-13-2006 at 04:28 PM.
    The name is pronounced bonn-gee-bee
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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    7
    BonjiB,

    Thanks a lot for that. I'm all set!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    WI
    Posts
    1,975
    You are set? Which one are you buying? Here is a good macro thread: http://dcresource.com/forums/showthread.php?t=22516

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    7
    I was heading for the Canon S2IS or Sony ds-ch1 but niether have cable release or hotshoe (i think).

    It looks like my best bet is fuji finepix s7000 which has both. Dyou know if the image qulaity is good on these? There are mixed reviews on the net.....but then arent there always.

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