View allAll Photos Tagged panerai
Advertisement for Italian luxury watches seen on East 63rd Street and Madison Avenue, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan
Light:
Xmas lights in the background, 21cm gridded spot with orange gel on the background, stripbox camera left, white cardboard reflector in front of watch - and right rear.. SB900 aimed at reflector on the right @ 1/128. ELC1000 through snoot at watch above camera to the left. Watch on black glass.
Nikon D810 / Nikkor 105mm
Elinchrom ELB1200 at wood background / gridded reflector with orange gel. Nikon SB900 left front. Nikon SB900 aiming up at white cardboard reflector above watch.SB900's in slave mode. Elinchrom ELB triggered with Skyport HS.
Light:
21cm reflector with grid and blue gel on the background. Christmas lights in the back. 90x35 stripbox CL. SB900 at white cardboard CR rear. BXRi with snoot aimed in front of watch (on the glass surface). White cardboard in front of subject left and right.
Nikon D800E and Nikkor 105mm. Triggered with Skyport. Nikon speed lights in optical slave mode 1/128 power.
First try focus stacking. I took 170 pictures of this stacking them together, only using a reversed 50mm Nikon lens
15 years paneristi.com anniversary watch.
Strobist info:
Elinchrom ELC 1000 above the watch through a diffuser. SB900 with a blue gel - aimed at tin foil in the background. Lots of white poster board to block reflections in the case. Triggered with skyport, SB900 in slave mode at 1/64.
SB900 CL to the side, SB900 CR to the rear, SB800 aimed at cardboard in front of the watch at an angle. Elinchrom ELC1000/Skyport used to trigger the SB's in slave mode only. Nikon D800E / Nikkor 105mm micro
Strobist: Elinchrom Rotalux softbox above in front of the watch angled slightly towards the subject. White cardboard above and below the watch. Black flags left and right. Nikon SB900 left and right rear @1/32. Triggered with Skyport HS Plus, nikon flashes in slave mode. Nikon D800E with Nikkor 70-200 2.8G. The watch is on strings - top and bottom - that I removed in post.
This was basically to test the light before throwing water for the final image (in the comments below) > [https://www.flickr.com/photos/martinwilmsen/28364429945/in/dateposted-public/]
Dropping a wristwatch into a water tank. Inspired by photos I found here on flickr. You can find a description of the setup I used here: www.wristwatchphoto.com/2009/05/splashing-around-for-pane... Also see the other one: www.flickr.com/photos/martinwilmsen/3512685805/in/photost...