Hello all,
I have a friend who owns a renovation company here in Hong Kong, and he recently finished a multimillion USD apartment. He'd like me to take some pictures of it. I've never taken pictures of apartments, anything indoors really and was wondering if you guys have any pointers? He is a great friend, and I don't want to let him down! 🙂
I have a:
Nikon D40
Old school Nikon SS-24 speedlight from my father's Nikon F4, I'll buy a diffuser
AF-S Nikkor 18-200mm
AF Nikkor 20mm
AF-S Nikkor 18-55mm(D40 kit lens)
Thank you for your suggestions!
If the pictures are for advertising a multi-million dollar apartment, then you're not really equipped to take pictures in terms of lighting and likely experience- in that case, not letting your friend know that would be letting them down. Interior photographers generally replace *all* the interior light bulbs with tungsten photo slave flashes[1], add additional flashes to fill in between the bulbs and balance the lighting since the photo floods aren't adjustable (and some ND filters for bringing things back down if necessary,) use very expensive tilt/shift lenses that don't have very much distortion and can control perspective, and have lots of experience. At the high end, they'll also often add film lighting outside to ensure constant color temperature and control over the light coming in through the windows, though this depends on the venue and budget. Generally, if it's not furnished well, you'd want an interior designer and a furniture budget as well.
If they're just for your friend's personal use, then I'd go with the 20mm shot on a tripod, and probably do long exposure and flash multiple times manually (light painting with a flashgun) as you're not going to get even illumination with a single flash- and people aren't comfortable in a room that doesn't have light coming from two directions- if you can balance the flash with the window light, then that'll save you having to do multiple flashes if your flash will cover the range well, but I'd expect light fall-off if you're going to camera-mount the flash, and you might be better off with a remote trigger and a light stand for the flash. It'll also be difficult to get good white balance with mixed window and flash lighting- depending on the decor and walls, that could be a significant issue.
Make sure your friend understands the difference between personal and professional use- poorly done, even well lit shots used for advertising their services or the property itself can end up costing them business and money.
Lots of people think that anyone who's a camera buff can shoot anything professionally. Like last-minute "Can you do my wedding?" surprises, a friendship isn't worth losing over a single event that you're not equipped to shoot.
You may find the following books useful:
http://www.amazon.com/Interior-Phot...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1226497213&sr=8-1
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/qwork/3273592/used/Interior Shots: Pro-Lighting
[1] Like these:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000B75VSS
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00009UT59
Note the different power level and beam spread- you really want a selection so that you can provide the right "look" for things like lamps.