A Drill Press
Browndog
Registered Users Posts: 134 Major grins
This is from this past winter but I would really appreciate your c & c as I hope to reshoot in the near future.:dunno
Eixf: http://browndog.smugmug.com/photos/newexif.mg?ImageID=159113728
Eixf: http://browndog.smugmug.com/photos/newexif.mg?ImageID=159113728
Mike W....
0
Comments
I can see it's a drill press, but other than that it doesn't do a whole lot for me I'm afraid.
What's at the top where the handles are that we cannot see?
Are you able to next time get above it and to the side and get more of it in? ..... Skippy
.
Skippy (Australia) - Moderator of "HOLY MACRO" and "OTHER COOL SHOTS"
ALBUM http://ozzieskip.smugmug.com/
:skippy Everyone has the right to be stupid, but some people just abuse the privilege :dgrin
At 1/2000 sec. inside exposure it appears as though you might have metered off the background sky. The result appears as the dark shadows in the image. The dark shadow on the support plate causes it to disappear into the background. Likewise, the dark shadows at the top cause the rest of the press to disappear. Try metering off the support table or something else then recompose the shot.
You shot this straight-on so the whole press appears to be the focal point.
However, you appear to want to key in on the table, the drill bit, and the drill chuck/collet assembly. Perhaps recompose by lowering the chuck to be closer to the table, and shoot at an angle down at something larger than 50mm to get the texture in the table, too. Instead of the position you stood in try going 45-60 degrees to the left so that you can still get the riser in the image. Might want to try several shots at several different angles to see what works best.
GreyLeaf PhotoGraphy
Thanks for all the input Skippy & David! I will give it all a try.
http://www.jonathanswinton.com
http://www.swintoncounseling.com
I like machinery in B&W also, but I do think this is basically a monochromatic shot that profits by the warm sunlight that it would lose in the conversion to B&W.
The background does not help here though. The contact between the drill chuck and the background is better avoided by raising or lowering either the camera or the drill chuck too. I think a darker background might be helpful, as lighter tones tend to grab the eye as it roams around. The darkness at the left of the drill bit I rather like.
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Alright
Here it is in grayscale
And then in B/W
Orange against the complementary light blue background. Right out of grade school color wheels
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Gear: Canon 7D
Canon 24-105 f/4 L
Canon 28mm f/1.8
Tamron 17-50 f/2.8