The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
I'm pretty dumb when it comes to these digital cameras and I would appreciate some suggestions on what kind of camera I would need for taking photos of my knife collection & also taking good, clear photos of various items to be posted on eBay for sale.
It's my understanding that I need 1000 pixel camera for eBay. Can any of y'all help me out with some suggestions on a reasonably priced camera & what I need to do to achieve proper lighting?
Thanks, Kent Gable
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Hi Kent:
Hog emailed me that you had asked the question & I've sent a friends request to you.
I've sold one or two things on eBay over the last 15 years & good pictures, along with a good description, are an ABSOLUTE NECESSITY but you don't need a $1000 NIKON. In fact my old NIKON went belly-up about a year ago & I replaced it with a $200 FUJI S1800 that does a fine job as would most every camera in that price range. I bought the FUJI because COSTCO was running a special when I needed a new camera.
Don't confuse camera pixels with the pixels that can be displayed on a monitor. Any modern digital camera stores many, many, many more pixels than you can display. The pixel size eBay suggest is the width of the image in a jpeg file that you're uploading & the camera image is automagically resized when you load the image from your camera into your computer & again when you upload it to eBay.
I have an auction for a old CANONFLEX RP exposure meter about to close & frankly, it's at 3 to 4 times the actual value (I'm not complaining :-) based of what's sold in the last year. I attribute it mainly to the pictures.
No secrets to good pictures, all you need is an inexpensive digital camera and a tripod. I'd also suggest a small, inexpensive light tent because good light gives you a lot more flexibility.
I manually set the white balance because I shoot in-doors under artificial light but let the camera do the rest. I always shoot on a tripod & set the autotimer for two seconds. I also use a photo editor (in my case Photoscape because it's free) but any editor will work. I'm not trying to deceive anyone just show the best possible picture I can. I crop my pictures & resize the jpeg file to at least 2000 pixels on the longest dimension. Doesn't make a difference on the small image but it does when you enlarge it - the larger the original image, the larger the displayed image when you click "Enlarge".
My $200 camera isn't nearly as smart as a $1000 NIKON so I can also compensate for any camera (and operator) short comings, i.e lighten or darken the image a bit. Whatever the picture needs to look like it was shot by a good photographer (I'm not) in a studio.
Good luck with your new "selling career". -larry-
You're welcome.
Here's a link to Photoscape if you want to download it. It's older & not as sophisticated as say Photoshop but it's free!!! It's actually pretty powerful and should do everything you need with a minimal learning curve.
-larry-
Kent:
Here's a link to a Wikipedia article on digital cameras that can read or if you're impulsive & impatient like me, grab the first one you see & start shooting. You can always figure it out on the fly.
The FUJI I use would be considered a "bridge camera" which is what I think gives the best bang for the buck. It is a compromise between cost & smarts.
I look at myself as the stupid boss & my photo editor as the super smart assistant who fixes my mistakes behind the scenes.
Moore's Law (# of transistors per sq. inch doubles every x months) holds true in the digital camera industry just like every other electronic product. I don't like to shop and when I bought the FUJI, I went to COSTCO & it did what I wanted at a price I'd pay with the months coupon. It was in the same original price range as a similar CANON & NIKON bridge camera but the $40 off is why I bought it. I'm thrifty (read cheap) & I think that digital cameras are a very competitive market and you pretty much get what you pay for in the major brands.
If I just wanted to take outdoor snapshots I'd still be using my old NIKON or I'd own a $59 Casio or Kodak. Something in the NIKON electronics screwed up and I was getting purple pictures under artificial low light conditions I sometimes use. I could edit them to get most of the purple out but it was a huge pain in the arse & I'm not an avid photographer; it's a chore that I tolerate rather than something I enjoy.
Back in the very early days, I used a 8mm analog video camera I already owned & a video capture/edit card rather than invest in a then very expensive digital camera. I did eBay full time for a couple of years a while back and finally bought the NIKON to save time. The NIKON & the FUJI are the only digital cameras I've ever owned and I'm satisfied that both gave/give me a good bang for the buck.
Larry-to me, cheap means "good" except in certain areas like knives, decent fishing gear, guns or things that my life depends on such as in survival equipment.
I admit that I'm just not into most Hi-Tech stuff mainly because I don't care to be.
Do I really need a digital camera? I've got a good quality Olympus film camera that does take pretty good close ups. Why couldn't I just shoot up a role of film, have it developed on a CD & download into my computer?
Why has everything gotten so complicated these days? I am into basics and I don't like fads.
Thanks for the info on cameras, though.
If film works for you, there's certainly no "rule" that says you have to go to digital & if you're only going to do a small number of listings/pictures, I agree there's no need to spend the money.
From time to time I sell "vintage" 35mm slr's & I'll sometimes shoot a roll of film with the camera, take the roll to Walgreens & post the pictures I took in an album for perspective buyers to look at.
I take enough pictures so that the cost of buying film & paying for developing would prohibit me from doing it. The big thing, however, is that I can take my pictures & instantly see the results - then it's a simple matter to retake any I'm not satisfied with. Not possible with film.
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