Afzelia Xylay, Masur Burl, Pippy Yew, Extreme Spalted Oak Burl

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yorkie

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I've never worked with Xylay before and wow! What amazing grain! The Pippy yew is from England, the Spalted Oak burl has a face in it, you see it? The Masur burl is matched with Atrax rollerball. All are CA finish. Even though I'm using a Canon EOS, a light box and professional lighting, I cannot get a good photo to save my life; all except for the macro photos are too dark.
 

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seamus7227

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Mar 18, 2009
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Stephen, are you using a Canon - EF 50mm f/1.8 II Telephoto Lens to take your pics?
2473035_ra.jpg;canvasHeight=500;canvasWidth=500
I think they look great but i do see that there could be some improvement made
 

azamiryou

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Aug 14, 2010
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Silver Spring, MD USA
Beautiful woods.

I think the reason your whole-pen photos are dark is because you're using a white background and allowing the camera to auto-set the exposure. With all that white, the camera sees "too much light" and reduces the exposure. On the close-ups, you don't see so much of the white background, so it doesn't make as big a difference.

The fix depends on your camera features. You can set aperture and shutter speed manually, or some let you increase/decrease the exposure (+/- EV) while still using auto exposure settings. If there's no way to do it with your camera, you can try using a medium gray background instead of white. (A black background will have the opposite effect, and cause the camera to over-expose the shots.)
 

yorkie

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Mar 2, 2009
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Location
Charlotte, North Carolina
Thanks for that however, I am using a medium grey background. I have my camera set to full auto but it is a digital SLR and does allow for aperture priority and stuff like that.


Beautiful woods.

I think the reason your whole-pen photos are dark is because you're using a white background and allowing the camera to auto-set the exposure. With all that white, the camera sees "too much light" and reduces the exposure. On the close-ups, you don't see so much of the white background, so it doesn't make as big a difference.

The fix depends on your camera features. You can set aperture and shutter speed manually, or some let you increase/decrease the exposure (+/- EV) while still using auto exposure settings. If there's no way to do it with your camera, you can try using a medium gray background instead of white. (A black background will have the opposite effect, and cause the camera to over-expose the shots.)
 
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