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Mrs. Mary Jane, Grand Forks, ND Age and Occupation: 26, Instructional Designer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Lead Programmer Engagement Date: February 28, 2009 Wedding Date: September 2009 Venue: City Hall About Me: I'm a career woman on the surface and a homemaker at heart. I love fast cars and high heels, and my favorite food is cake. Mr. Mary Jane and I are both full-time employees and students, and we just bought our first house. We love to curl up on the couch with buttery popcorn, Sour Patch Kids, and the latest Netflix arrival -- whenever we can get a break from everyday life.
About Mrs. Mary Jane

So you’re trying to take some photos of your bling. Or your finished DIY menu cards. Or the sweet shower invitation you got the other day. And you already know Anne Ruthmann’s tutorial like the back of your hand. But the pictures just aren’t coming out right. Why???

My hunch is: You’re probably not playing close enough attention to Step #3.

Good light is ESSENTIAL to a great photograph! The easiest light to work with is natural light because it’s the most powerful and consistent. Make your way to a nearby window or take it outside. If you don’t have any natural light to work with, you can get creative with a flash light, the light coming from your computer or TV, or just any ol’ light in the ceiling or from a lamp around your house. In order for the light to be bright enough in an artificial lighting situation, you may need to get closer to the light source, which is why a flashlight may sometimes work better in these situations.

The first time I tried to take these shots, it was a gloomy day and I was trying to use the natural light from a north-facing window. Every single shot I took was blurry. Since I don’t have tons of artificial lighting in the house, I decided to be patient, knowing that the best shots I take are on sunny days.

And a few days later, I got a perfect day!

I positioned myself under this west-facing window on a sunny afternoon:

The Secret to Scoring Awesome Detail Shots :  wedding photography Window1 window

And started clicking away.

The Secret to Scoring Awesome Detail Shots :  wedding photography Shootin

I also used a white sheet of paper as a background. This helps to bounce the available light back at the camera and the object, giving the camera the illusion that the setting is brighter than it really is.

Pictures come out blurry for two reasons, generally. One is focus. You have to have focus. If your camera is having trouble with this, try a simpler background. My white envelope worked perfectly for this.

The other is shutter speed. Your camera’s shutter speed will slow down if your environment isn’t bright enough. I’m sure you’ve taken a photo at a party and heard how long the camera took to snap it, and thought “that’ll for sure be blurry”. That’s because your shutter was open too long. The camera leaves the shutter open as long as it needs to to absorb enough light for an adequately bright shot. Unfortunately, most people can’t stand statue-still for longer than 1/20th of a second or so, and so we get blurry photos.

I snapped about 150 photos of Mr. Mary Jane’s ring on that aforementioned cloudy day. Most were shot at 1/10 of a second, and I got maybe two usable shots. When I changed location and shot on a sunny day with a bright background (the envelope), I took about 100 shots (at 1/80 of a second or faster shutter speed) and almost all of them were crystal clear.

Yes, I have a pretty nice camera. But that really doesn’t matter as much as you may think. Your skill and knowledge matter much more than how much your camera cost. Case in point:

The Secret to Scoring Awesome Detail Shots :  wedding photography Myring 01

I took that one with my Canon Powershot SD300 Digital Elph, which is a 5-year-old, 4 megapixel point-and-shoot:

The Secret to Scoring Awesome Detail Shots :  wedding photography Camera

[source]

So if you’re having trouble getting a good shot, don’t whine about how much your camera sucks.

  1. Follow Anne Ruthmann’s tips.
  2. Get your camera to focus properly (even if that means a very simple background).
  3. GET MORE LIGHT!
  4. THEN, get some MORE LIGHT!

What’s your number one tip for amateur photographers?

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20 Responses to “The Secret to Scoring Awesome Detail Shots”

1.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Frozen Yogurt (message)  2,685 posts, Sugar bee

Thanks for the tutorial MJ! I am one of those whiners because it’s so much easier to think my camera stinks than to think I’m an unskilled photographer. :) Now I have something new to try.

 
2.
Miss Bear Cub
Bee
Miss Bear Cub (message)  1,566 posts, Bumble bee

know what you’re actually focusing on.
It’s easy to focus. Slightly less easy to realize what the heck you’re actually focusing ON. (I do not suffer from this ;) … I think.)

 
3.
Gator
Member
Gator (message)  607 posts, Busy bee

Thank you so much! I have been trying to get good bling shots for forever… I can’t wait to go home and try this!

 
4.
Jessie516
Hostess
Jessie516 (message)  5,480 posts, Bee Keeper

This is a great tutorial. I think you’re smart to take the photos on a sunny day. I always get a weird photo if I try with artificial lighting and the flash doesn’t work at all (per Anne’s instructions).

 
5.
pvaulter718
Member
pvaulter718 (message)  2,116 posts, Buzzing bee

My number one tip is take 100 pictures, and then when you feel like you took enough, take 10 more! This may annoy my friends and family when I take 15 family portraits, but we always get a good one out of the bunch, somehow *even if it involves photoshop*

 
6.
Miss Mary Jane
Bee
Miss Mary Jane (message)  1,970 posts, Buzzing bee

@pvaulter718: Definitely - don’t assume you’ve got a good one just ’cause you took a handful. The beauty of digital photography is: you aren’t going to waste your film by taking more!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Dew Drop (message)  381 posts, Helper bee

Thanks for the post, MJ! I’m going to try this out today! :)

 
8.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Moonbeam (message)  1,732 posts, Bumble bee

Good tips, my favorite is a tripod. They’re not that expensive and unless your subject is moving, you’ll never have a blurry picture again.

 
9.
alishaneva
Member
alishaneva (message)  2,152 posts, Buzzing bee

Thanks! That shot of your ring is truly gorgeous!

 
10.
miss longhorn
Member
miss longhorn (message)  236 posts, Helper bee

My Kodak Easyshare and I thank you for your encouragement!

 
11.
lcneiny
Member
lcneiny (message)  183 posts, Blushing bee

Thanks for this!! Can’t wait to try out these tips to get a photo of my bling

 
12.
Miss Mary Jane
Bee
Miss Mary Jane (message)  1,970 posts, Buzzing bee

@leenie: Man, I’m lazy. We have several tripods (from full sized to pocket-sized) and I so rarely break them out. They are fantastic tools though!

 
13.
LatteLove
Hostess
LatteLove (message)  5,587 posts, Bee Keeper

haha. thanks for the helpful advice Miss Mary Jane. Lighting was my biggest issue when taking our honeymoon photos! I could never get enough of it!

 
14.
tea
Member
tea (message)  7,263 posts, Bee Keeper

i don’t know if this is a real tip, but i like to get my camera as close to the object as possible without using the zoom.

 
15.
Miss Poodle
Bee
Miss Poodle (message)  3,387 posts, Sugar bee

yes! I wish I could be patient enough to wait for the perfect light and take the pictures, but when it comes to the craft ones (that I post here) I can’t wait because I’m always on a rush and it’s winter here, so yeah my pictures suck - lol

 
16.
Miss Elephant
Bee
Miss Elephant (message)  6,177 posts, Bee Keeper

thank you for those tips! I’ll have to try taking some detail pics again.

 
17.
Guest Icon
Guest
Sarah

My top tip is take a zillion pictures and toss the ones that don’t work! A friend’s cousin is known for always getting just the right shot, and when people ask her secret, that’s it: it’s not that she took one photo and it was amazing, it’s that she took 30 and threw out 29 of them.

 
18.
harperjs
Member
harperjs (message)  24 posts, Newbee

Nice tutorial! My favorite photography advice is “Cameras don’t take pictures, people do!” and you proved that with your old Canon. :)

 
19.
eileen marie
Member
eileen marie (message)  1,662 posts, Bumble bee

Great photos! Thanks for the tutorials. I couldn’t stand marquis-cut diamonds, until I fell in love with yours-so different and beautful.

 
20.
Miss Mouse
Bee
Miss Mouse (message)  5,844 posts, Bee Keeper

Thanks for the tips!

 

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Mrs. Mary Jane
Mrs. Mary Jane

Mrs. Mary Jane, Grand Forks, ND Age and Occupation: 26, Instructional Designer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Lead Programmer Engagement Date: February 28, 2009 Wedding Date: September 2009 Venue: City Hall About Me: I'm a career woman on the surface and a homemaker at heart. I love fast cars and high heels, and my favorite food is cake. Mr. Mary Jane and I are both full-time employees and students, and we just bought our first house. We love to curl up on the couch with buttery popcorn, Sour Patch Kids, and the latest Netflix arrival -- whenever we can get a break from everyday life.

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