txtwyst
Member
I read this on ebay a while back but never tried it until now. Maybe this is posted somewhere here, but I haven't searched around to look for it. It is for taking close ups of small items.
Wash and dry an empty milk jug. Cut out the bottom. The milk jug I used had a line around it just where the curved bottom ended.
I took a white plastic plate and turned it upside down and then put a paper towel over it (just to cover the stamped name on the bottom of the plate). My "photo booth" was set up on my bed beside the napping kitties.
fancy picture-takin' set up--only in texas [
]
(ignore the messy bed--can't get those kitties to make the bed any more!)
My camera (Casio Exilim EX-Z55) lens just happens to fit perfectly into the opening of the milk jug. I guess if you have a larger lens, you could cut off the top so your lens would just fit.
my camera
I put the pen on the paper towel, put the milk jug over the pen, turned the jug so you couldn't see the sides and snapped the pic. Obviously, I also had my camera set to macro focus.
Looking through the viewfinder, what you see doesn't look great at all. But when the flash goes off, it gives it light and the milk jug diffused the light from the flash so you don't get those bright flash marks.
The first pic I took was with the blinds closed and no lights on. The room was fairly dark. Then I opened one blind to see if it would make a difference. It definitely made a difference in what I saw through the camera. I think the biggest difference is in the color of the white background. I'll post both pics and you decide.
first picture - no light
same pen, with blind open
Here are a few more "milk jug" pics:
my first KC twist, satin nickel, leopardwood
black enamel slim, red morrel burl
teacher's pen, black and red dyed maple burl and white holly
black titanium slim, buckeye burl (i just love this wood)
Shhhhhh.... sleeping kitties.....
Just thought I'd share. I was rather surprised at the outcome. They will probably come out better if you were in a lighted room, but these aren't too bad.
Let me know if you try it and how it works for you!
p
Wash and dry an empty milk jug. Cut out the bottom. The milk jug I used had a line around it just where the curved bottom ended.
I took a white plastic plate and turned it upside down and then put a paper towel over it (just to cover the stamped name on the bottom of the plate). My "photo booth" was set up on my bed beside the napping kitties.
fancy picture-takin' set up--only in texas [

(ignore the messy bed--can't get those kitties to make the bed any more!)
My camera (Casio Exilim EX-Z55) lens just happens to fit perfectly into the opening of the milk jug. I guess if you have a larger lens, you could cut off the top so your lens would just fit.
my camera
I put the pen on the paper towel, put the milk jug over the pen, turned the jug so you couldn't see the sides and snapped the pic. Obviously, I also had my camera set to macro focus.
Looking through the viewfinder, what you see doesn't look great at all. But when the flash goes off, it gives it light and the milk jug diffused the light from the flash so you don't get those bright flash marks.
The first pic I took was with the blinds closed and no lights on. The room was fairly dark. Then I opened one blind to see if it would make a difference. It definitely made a difference in what I saw through the camera. I think the biggest difference is in the color of the white background. I'll post both pics and you decide.
first picture - no light
same pen, with blind open
Here are a few more "milk jug" pics:
my first KC twist, satin nickel, leopardwood
black enamel slim, red morrel burl
teacher's pen, black and red dyed maple burl and white holly
black titanium slim, buckeye burl (i just love this wood)
Shhhhhh.... sleeping kitties.....
Just thought I'd share. I was rather surprised at the outcome. They will probably come out better if you were in a lighted room, but these aren't too bad.
Let me know if you try it and how it works for you!
p