Medical Lab Equipment Photograhy

Mobile Medical Lab Equipment

Mobile medical lab modules are fabricated to maximize space with sophisticated specialized testing equipment and necessary counter space.  This session used existing light.  Details were important and close ups in a tight space yet give the prospective buyer a more accurate image of the space.  Wide angle lenses distort erroneously depicting interiors larger than actual feel.

Medical Lab Portable Module

Close ups show details:
Module Medical Equipment

Capturing the working surfaces, cabinetry and height capacity are marketing points:
Mobile Medical Lab
Once again-Canon 24-70mm lens gives all the necessary flexibility.
Canon 5d Mark 3.

Product Photography on White with Multiple Angles

Some products are just gorgeous due to their exterior surface. This diamond pattern is lovely! The reflective nature is the tough part about photographing this product. Our client is launching a new product line with two sizes of this unit. They also wanted to show the quality of craftsmanship, details and a product styled use image.

Product styling always sounds simple: Grab some items and stack them inside. The last thing you want for your product is distraction from the unit. In this case we discussed  colors of soda, lid options, choice of cans, what to put on the top rack, position of the labels and making sure everything was “balanced” to the eye–and keep these items from moving/rolling. Attention to detail pays off in a well laid out composition and the product “shines”.  In this case–it always shines!

Reflective products (glass, metal, jewelry, high gloss acrylic products) offer challenges. Once the lighting is in place-then you begin to block out reflections you don’t want – inclusive of the photographer in the product. Controlling the light to not blow out the high reflection, yet show off that very shiny surface we all love. The diamond metal pattern here controlled some of the typical hot spots. We were also able to make use of massive overhead natural lighting and several white reflectors to obtain an even product surface look.  Working all of the elements together takes a lot of time. We spend more time setting up a shot, than shooting, typically.  Shooting multiple angles meant repositioning everything (continuous lighting, white reflectors, c-stands, every clothes pin and re-taping) with each change of angle, and the second unit.

When you’re selling online any product photography should include an all-the-parts shot, manuals included.  Let prospective clients know what’s in the box.  We’ve also been asked to edit the photos adding the dimensions for clients.  Make it easy for people to buy your product!

Continuous Lighting
Natural Lighting
White Reflectors
Canon 24-70mm 2.8 Lens
Canon 100mm 2.8 Macro Lens

Product Photography in Tucson Arizona

Product Photography, Outdoor Umbrella

This product photography session was shot outside the manufacturing plant using the brilliant sunlight to work as our soft box. Blocking the light and positioning the full umbrella shot took a great amount of time during which the sun was shifting, but well worth the time. In post we extracted the product for a pure white background product shot. We used Canon’s 24-70mm lens for the top image. The second image (below) was shot with  Canon’s 70-200mm lens for a beautiful capture of the tighter shot. We used two 5′ x 5′ Matthews Silks 1.6 stops. One was used to block the sun and one placed behind the product.  This is an out of the camera image with no photo editing.

Phone Charging Station Product Photography

Large Product Photography

There is a big product and there is a BIG product!  Airplanes have beautiful design lines and beautiful paint jobs. They sparkle in the sunlight.  Photographing large products means working in a large area, more importantly having staff to maneuver the airplane into the desired position of the photographer.  Having a beautiful sunny day with cloudy blue skies makes the session wonderful!
Large Product Photography

To shoot the interior cockpit we covered the windshield with a tarp, squeezed into a tight cockpit and closed the doors to keep out the ambient light using only the glow of the instrument light panels.  Using a tri-pod and the slowest shutter speed of the Canon 5d Mark III returned a beautiful shot.

Airplane Cockpit