It's been three months since I wrote about returning to the miniatures hobby I'd put aside a few years ago. I still haven't picked up a paintbrush in anger in those weeks, but I'm getting close. In the meantime I had to empty a large walk-in cupboard to clear the space to reestablish my painting table. Although everything's packed away again so that I finally have a functional workspace I'm going to have to unpack and reorganise everything again at least once before I'm satisfied.
For the sake of the bloggery I've invested in the finishing touches to my layout for miniatures photography:
- A nifty wee tabletop tripod.
- A quality PVC backdrop.
- And a pair of cheap halogen spots; I'd've thought these would give bad light, but the guy in the camera shop where I bought the backdrop pointed out that digital image manipulation makes it easy to correct the light.
All of these labours, those recent vicissitudes and other diversions notwithstanding, my scanner has been the source of the major problem with which I've had to deal. When I began posting pictures of my miniatures to the web a digital camera was way beyond my means, so that I had to rely on my scanner to take my pictures.
The pictures- above and right, show that this produced surprisingly good results; notice, eg. the depth of field in these 2 samples. So I was disappointed to find that my new scanner was much worse. Why worry you might ask? I've finally got a digicam and a half decent photographic layout after all. It's just that scanning can still be convenient for taking pictures of sprues, parts, and so on; all the sort of stuff that I'll need for blogging in other words.
Rising to the challenge
So, wishing to use the scanner for some miniatures pictures, I set out thoroughly to investigate the parameters of my scanner (an Epson Stylus DX3850 printer/scanner), to find the best settings for my purposes. The figure I used- painted version below, was Bosun Grogspar from Privateer Press' Warmachine. Grogspar was part of the swag from Saturday's Claymore.
I went round all the minis traders twice before I finally chose it: I was looking for a mini for August's painting challenge at the Sheffield Irregulars. The Sheffield Irregulars are a fB group I joined a few months ago in one of those random bouts of networking that you do on a social networking site. They have monthly challenges in which entrants must paint a mini (or minis) of their choice according to an agreed theme; August's theme is 'swashbuckling', and I was girding my loins to join in.
I'd been looking for the inevitable pirates but all I'd been able to find was Grogspar. On my second trip round the traders I saw Grogspar and his piratical mercenary mateys at the Edinburgh League of Gamers' Warmachine particpation game (highly commended), and I knew they would fit the bill. Grogspar it was then.
Testing, testing
1. Background
I'd started doing this with other minis but it had turned out that I wasn't going to be using them for RD/KA! so I decided to start all over again with the Bosun. That first run had at least taught me a few lessons about going about the task systematically, so I was able to work more quickly.
Backgrounds |
2. Document type
My background set, I next had to determine the best document type setting: photograph was my instinct but I was being thorough after all.
Document types |
3. Image type and resolution
Image type was going to be colour or grayscale; resolution (AKA. destination) was screen/web or an 'Other' setting allowing me to choose the image's dpi resolution. Screen/web seemed the obvious choice.
Image types and resolution |
4. Brightness
I hadn't noticed the brightness control on the scanner control panel before, so I was quite pleased with myself when I started experimenting with it during my first attempt at this task.
Brightness |
- Paper background and box cover.
- Photograph document type.
- Greyscale screen/web.
- Brightness 50.
3 comments:
Hey John - glad you made it back to the hobby.
Looking forward to seeing your August painting challenge entry. Thanks for the SI mention. :)
You're welcome SI. I plan on blogging as much of my work on this as possible. And I expect to add the Irregulars to my 'Friends' links soon. ;)
How remiss of me not to welcome SI to RD/KA!, and to thank them for posting. ;)
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