Models in reality vs in photos

Scale model photography, techniques, equipment, advice.
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Nikola
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Models in reality vs in photos

Post by Nikola »

Hi all,

I have a question about how you guys handle the following challenge:

My assumption is that we all work under some kind of light when building models and then we take photos under optimal and controlled light conditions.

However, we all know that our models don't look exactly the same when under insufficient light, and some of those nice and subtle colour modulations, effects, etc. get lost. This is especially the case at exhibitions where lighting is usually not sufficient.

Do any of you have any tips to balance things out while at the same time not overdoing it on the actual model?

This kind of lighting (below) is rare at exhibitions, at least in my experience:

Image

Best,
Nikola
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Twokidsnosleep
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Re: Models in reality vs in photos

Post by Twokidsnosleep »

Interesting
Not many THAT intense competition types here to be too concerned with your photo set up vs display light
The great equalizer at competitions, IMHO, is everyone’s build at a model show is in the same lighting
I have seen builds displayed with their own lamps…meh, just in the way

In a similar vein, a while ago some fellow came on here discussing how their paint was ‘to scale’…then that all died down
Scale colour was an intellectual concept that was more concept than intellect
I suppose it will crop up again
Scott

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Stokesy44
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Re: Models in reality vs in photos

Post by Stokesy44 »

Twokidsnosleep wrote: Sun Nov 16, 2025 4:49 pm Interesting
Not many THAT intense competition types here to be too concerned with your photo set up vs display light
The great equalizer at competitions, IMHO, is everyone’s build at a model show is in the same lighting
I have seen builds displayed with their own lamps…meh, just in the way

In a similar vein, a while ago some fellow came on here discussing how their paint was ‘to scale’…then that all died down
Scale colour was an intellectual concept that was more concept than intellect
I suppose it will crop up again
The only thing I have ever heard about scale and color is the smaller the scale, the more you need to lighten the color, or the modulation at least.

Personally, I'm more concerned about the weathering process making the kit too dark. That's why I try to be careful with the tone of my base colors.
Its been tried and tested, it works! So don't blame the system if you're no good. :doh:
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aur0ra145
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Re: Models in reality vs in photos

Post by aur0ra145 »

Interesting subject. My bench lights are Philips Hue lights that I can control the color on. I generally set them to ~6500K for any modeling work, the Google command "set the lights to daylight" gets you this setting. It's also the temperature that I photograph my models at. Only difference is I diffuse the light with a photo booth when taking photos. Can't remember the last time I had to color adjust in post photo editing the Kelvin for a photo. Usually it's the exposure and ISO that need a little bit of tweaking.

I've not noticed an issue with model competition lighting. Specifically here in the US, florescent 4-tube lights are between 4100-6500K. So, pretty close to what I model at. Generally, the paint is the paint color. The different temperature lights will have the same effect for all the different models at the competition. So, level playing field? Hopefully, the judges understand and don't go all crazy about a color being slightly off based on warmer or cooler ambient lighting.

Example of photo with zero edits, as shot from my bench, without diffusing.

Image

Example of photo with kelvin as shot, exposure adjusted and ISO slightly adjusted, with diffused lights.

Image

Image

As shot, from the model competition place, no adjustments.

Image

Image

Unfortunately my spray booth has lights that aren't conducive to photos. They're on the high end of the the kelvin scale, maybe around 9000K if I had to guess. Never has changed how I sprayed stuff. Only big problem is if I'm blending similar colors, I may need to get the model out of the lights to maker sure the blend is going well.

Image

With real subjects, we also gets lots of variation based on light. This is from an airshow about a month ago. Photos occurred about 45 seconds apart. As shot, with no adjustments.

Image

Image

Historical reference photo. Note a lot of WWII photos have a very weird hues due to the Kodachrome film if they were originally shot in color. This photo I think was colorized after the fact.

Image

Model version of same thing with exposure and ISO adjustments.

Image

All that to say, I just paint my models to make me happy. If they look good on my display shelf, that's good enough for me.
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Twokidsnosleep
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Re: Models in reality vs in photos

Post by Twokidsnosleep »

good answer that ^
Scott

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cor
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Re: Models in reality vs in photos

Post by cor »

I've been a photographer for decades. Lighting will always change, throughout the day. The year. The house. The only thing you can do to get it the way you want it is to build under the exact lighting conditions to which the model will be subjected at its primary display location. Otherwise build under a light that closest represents daylight.

And I really don't think it matters as much as proper building techniques. Or at all.
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