How to get the most swirls in your shot

Discussion in 'Car Detailing Product Discussion' started by Frankastic, Jan 22, 2014.

  1. Frankastic

    Frankastic Detail Photographer

    Hi guys

    I hear a lot of detailers are having trouble with getting the defects they want to show in their camera. So I like to offer some advice that works for me. Im not a pro, so my advice is from what I've experienced.

    before you start reading this article, you might want to understand the tri-angle rule to get the right exposure.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQw28-3LEU4

    For bright sunny days, I like to use higher F stops ( aperture ) to capture swirls. prefer F16 and up. if its light color cars I will use a higher F stop, for dark color cars I will use a lower F stop. Higher F stops gives you that star burst effect, lower F stops tend to be more round. After F stop is set, you will need to correct your shutter and ISO to create the right exposure.Try not to go lower than 1/50 on the shutter if you're doin handheld. instead bump the ISO up so the camera is more sensitive to light. I tend to make darker colors a little over exposed to see more defects out of the shadows and under exposed for light color cars to give the swirls some definition.

    here are examples of a high F stop photo in bright sunny day, notice the sun has a star burst effect. Red is a very hard color to capture..too much light will give u a pink effect and too little light will give you a darker red.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]



    But what if the light color cars are inside the garage?


    I would drop the F stop down lower to allow more light in. adjust shutter and ISO accordingly to get the right exposure.

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]














    here are some examples lower F stop with dark color cars. notice the light source is more round. you don't want very high F stops on dark colors because it will adsorb light, so you need more exposure to show swirls.








    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]


    But what if the dark color cars are outside?

    here is where it get tricky, if its really bright out then I will use a higher F stop. I don't like doing this because everything else is way under exposed and you can't bring the details back.

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    if its not too bright like later in the afternoon, I use a lower F stop.
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]






    I hope you find these advice useful with your photos
    Please comment or like this post if you find it helpful and like more articles alike.
    Thanks for looking!


    Franki
     
  2. Runge

    Runge New Member

    any tips for 'white' cars?
     
    Frankastic likes this.
  3. Frankastic

    Frankastic Detail Photographer

    White cars, I use high F stops depending on light.

    • if its outside at noon ( sunny ), I want the highest F stop possible. F22 and up
    • if its inside the garage with Husky LED lights. F5.6-9 will do
    basically the brighter the light source is the higher F stop you will use. You would be better off with manually focus. because there is no contrast with swirls in white, because the swirl itself is white. unlike black swirls are white when a light hits it. I hope you find this helpful
     
  4. premshine09

    premshine09 Jedi Nuba

    Nice tips! Thanks Franki!
     
    Frankastic likes this.
  5. hamza7

    hamza7 Welcome to Detailing

    Excellent Franki
     
    Frankastic likes this.
  6. CG6Lemon

    CG6Lemon New Member

    Thanks Franki. I bought my Nikon d3100 3-4 months ago and I'm still new with it. I'll try these tips out.






    Limny
     

Share This Page