I usually find what I need at textures dot com, sign up and you can download most for FREE, and a small fee for the very large files.
Here is a link to the PLANK wood textures, however they have many different wood textures.
http://www.textures.com/category/planks/45355
Doesn't Fred have something like that and it's seamless, to boot ??
I have the aurora graphics collection if you want a good one.
:dog42
Having distributed their product line briefly, I would say that you must not get out much. They are mediocre, overpriced and over rated and have the most restrictive licensing you will find anywhere.
I do agree that they are overpriced and restrictive, but they have some nice work.
Shoot and tweak. Hands down the best advice I could give regarding this. It will save you loads of cash in the long run.
Usually I pick up my camera and set up a couple softboxes all at the same distance to get homogenous lighting all round and lay down whatever texture I need. Gives me freedom to provide 100% original artwork to a client.
Set your camera to twice the stop you have on your flash units. That should give you perfect exposure.
This obviously for photo enthusiasts. Another way is to create a small light box with foamcore/k-line and set a few lamps. You might have to play around a bit with the direction of the lighting but once set up you have a goto photobooth for textures and objects. Take care with white balancing and your good to go even with a compact camera.
if you can get your hands on D50 lights, this box can double up as a light box for spot colour checks on your prints.
Shoot in RAW to have maximum editing leeway.
That's something I have been wanting to do, Unfortunately, on this one I don't have the time to go out and buy the wood, and atm the only camera I have is on my phone.
Here is a episode from one of my favorite podcasts where they set up a small studio light box.... one of these day's I will get around to it.
[video=youtube;OyxzC5kqbyw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyxzC5kqbyw[/video]
You dont necessarily need wood. Foamcore works just as well and has a nice white finish. Camera? If you have an Iphone 5 or higher you can get results that are sufficient enough for some run of the mill prints. Heck, im printing images 1m2 taken by clients and some are actually suprisingly good. Most phones have better capturing capabilities than some of the first digital cameras I used to work with a few years back.
Thanks for remembering.
All our our woodgrain images are seamless tiles. Sizes up to 3600 x 3600 pixels that can be used as a pattern in Photoshop, FlexiSign, Corel, Adobe and other apps to create as large an image as you need at high resolution without distortion from resizing.
Right now we have a half price sale going on. Just enter 50OFF at check out to receive the discount.
http://www.allcompu.com/category/Textures:-Wood/1/page1/
Hi Fred, does your images could have similar quality to Dinoc products when printed? I'm quoting right now a project using Dinoc and I would be cheaper to print it myself and laminate it.