I've been working on a project for some time now in which I plan to photograph a series of "made-up" products in the studio. The first shot, and the one that has taken the longest to put together is an overhead shot looking down onto the product below on a Sinar f2 4x5. This is proving difficult because I don't have a camera stand in my apartment studio (aka living room) and am struggling to get the desired angle to the subject using a tripod. What I think might help: I'm thinking that a geared head would be able to crane the monorail camera enough to get the right angle given a higher pivot point/fulcrum, currently I've using a self leveling column on my mammoth gitzo legs. Otherwise I have been contemplating the layout to make it vertically oriented so I wont have to do an overhead shot, but that's a whole other kettle of fish, too because I would need to find appropriate hardware to secure the hero prop vertically instead of laying horizontally.
Any thoughts on an easier way to get this shot. It has been bugging me and I've been putting this shot off for a LONG time waiting on a magic solution for this overhead shot problem.
Any thought APUGers? Has anyone run across these issues when photographing tabletop/product images? How did you mitigate them?
Any thoughts on an easier way to get this shot. It has been bugging me and I've been putting this shot off for a LONG time waiting on a magic solution for this overhead shot problem.
Any thought APUGers? Has anyone run across these issues when photographing tabletop/product images? How did you mitigate them?