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Old 26 September 2012, 10:40 AM   #1
skippy1
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Watch Photography Question

I have seen some really incredible watch pictures on this forum and have found photography watches is much tougher than you might think. Any advice or tricks for a novice (with a point and shoot camera and an iPhone) on how to get the best shots?
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Old 26 September 2012, 10:54 AM   #2
moviefreak
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Steady hand...lots of pictures (out of 50 sometimes only one is good)... Natural light is good for ps camera or iphone... And good luck..You do not need super hi end equipment for a nice shot... Composition is also important....
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Old 26 September 2012, 12:04 PM   #3
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No water leaks in you camera housing is of the utmost importance. Most of my watch pics are taken at 50-90 ft. underwater.


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Old 26 September 2012, 12:15 PM   #4
Hairdude1
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Just start shooting and see what you get!
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Old 26 September 2012, 12:24 PM   #5
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its all about angle n lighting
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Old 26 September 2012, 12:35 PM   #6
FeelingTheBlues
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moviefreak View Post
Steady hand...lots of pictures (out of 50 sometimes only one is good)... Natural light is good for ps camera or iphone... And good luck..You do not need super hi end equipment for a nice shot... Composition is also important....
I personally use a small tripod and set the countdown on my camera to make sure it's steady, I'll have to agree with you about the load of pictures and the light though, I always have a hard time with those and sometimes I must take quite a lot of them before finding one I like (my lightbox has been rather helpful for that though, it does help to control the lighting). As well, I have a Nikon Coolpix L120 (which isn't a very expensive camera) so you definitely do not need a lot of fancy equipment to take pictures

By the way, please allow me to tell you I find your pictures incredible!
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Old 26 September 2012, 01:03 PM   #7
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Diffused lighting and a tripod are two things that will help even with a point and shoot camera.
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Old 26 September 2012, 01:04 PM   #8
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iPhone picture

Hello! I just did a test with my iPhone and I'm sure if you spend more time than I did you can get great shots. I tryed to attach the shot I just did but I'm not sure if I was successful.
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File Type: jpg IMG_0035.jpg (129.4 KB, 67 views)
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Old 26 September 2012, 01:15 PM   #9
caryyee
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Tripod, natural light, no flash, and avoid reflections! As to a camera, a $300-$500 is all you need! Heck, even an iPhone 4s takes brilliant close up shots!
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Old 26 September 2012, 01:26 PM   #10
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Quote:
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Tripod, natural light, no flash, and avoid reflections! As to a camera, a $300-$500 is all you need! Heck, even an iPhone 4s takes brilliant close up shots!
....and to think some people out there actually make a profession of it..
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Old 27 September 2012, 12:22 AM   #11
skippy1
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Thnaks for all the replies. I think I may get a tripod. My shaky hands may been doing me wrong.
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