I placed the monitor on a table (this one would be fine) and faced the monitor so people could see the photos seconds after they took them. The table also held props and the laptop that the camera was connected to.


Computer Setup for a DIY Photobooth

The basis of the idea evolved around the Apple Photobooth application on my MacBook Air. Photobooth is a free app that comes installed on all new Mac computers and it allows you to use your built-in webcam to take pictures of you and your friends photobooth style. It has a slick, simple interface with basically just one red button to push to enable the countdown timer and picture taking. I play around with the Photobooth app all the time with my kids so I was familiar with its capabilities and knew it was a good fit for what I wanted to achieve.


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I placed my laptop on the table and knew immediately that it was too low to the ground to get a good camera angle using my webcam. Fortunately I own this Belkin laptop stand that gave it an additional 5 inches of height off the ground and gave me added reassurance that any spilled drinks would not hit my computer.


Props for your photobooth

I happened to have a ton of funny props from my other video endeavors and they add some extra fun to the photobooth experience. I laid them out off camera view and to the side to contain them in a specific area and make readily accessible to change out between pictures.


Webcam setup for a DIY photobooth

In the end I decided to use my Logitech HD webcam instead of the built-in webcam on my MacBook Air. The Logitech HD webcam I have shoots streaming video in 1080p but it also takes fantastic still shots thanks to its built-in Carl Zeiss lens. Take a look at the difference in picture quality between the built-in webcam on my MacBook Air and my Logitech HD webcam.

About Printing

One of the great advantages of hiring a photobooth company for your party is the package typically comes with a photobooth operator (someone who runs the equipment and sanitizes the props) and unlimited printed photos.

If I record a video on my mac photo booth that surpasses 3 or 4 minutes it saves as an empty video. 0:00 seconds and I'm unable to play it. This began happening after I updated to MacOS Monterey. I have put my computer into safe mode, changed, users, restarted, deleted photobooth library and made a new one etc. Any help would be great. I've attached a photo as an example.

They are being saved in the Photo Booth Library Pictures folder just like you said. I have always gone there to browse my photobooth videos. Now when I go there they show up as .mov files with no thumbnail and when I open them they display an error message saying "not compatible with QuickTime" or something to that effect.

I'm using the built-in camera. I don't have any external cameras. The videos won't play in .mov files (the one's photobooth creates them in) and they won't open in QuickTime or play in the photobooth menu.

I have already put my mac in Safe Mode multiple times and haven't had much success. Although, whenever I go into safe mode I can't even use photobooth at all! When I open the application it says "No camera detected." When I go out of safe mode and back to regular mode the camera works but the videos don't save.

I closed my macbook recently thinking that it auto saves the running photobooth video. When I opened it again, the video was not in photobooth. I did some searching in where the videos are usually stored, and the .mov file is there, but can't be opened.

Looking online, it looks like this is caused by closing the macbook while the video is recording.

Is there a free way to salvage the video? It is about an hour long, and 30 minutes of it is stuff that I need.

First-time poster.. not sure if this is the correct forum, but a mod can move it if needed. 


I am looking for suggestions for a PC to run my photo booth that will be recording slow motion videos. Normally photobooth just takes photos and prints them, no problem. A basic i3 processor can handle it. 


But the new versions of photo booths are able to record video and against a green screen backdrop for some cool features for events and weddings. The video processing is heavy on the machine and I need to upgrade to speed it up. 


As far as I am aware, the software depends mostly on having a clock speed, rather than lots of threads ( not too sure). It used FFMPEG to make output the video files. 


Currently, it takes about 2 minutes on average settings ( i7 processor, 2.6ghz) ... but I need something quick to bring it down to 20 / 30 seconds for events. I don't need a graphics card... as far as I know. 


Any suggestions.

I've been buying laptops from HIDevolution for a while now as their build quality is superb and they have excellent customer service and do ship internationally (you see, I live in Dubai so getting a laptop that works 100% out of the box is crucial for me)

Well i am programmer myself and i build my own photobooth program in Windows, i used A6300 (now A6400) and it is tethered to my laptop with USB cable and use Sony PC Remote program. Then the camera is set to store file into the laptop rather than SD card. From there my photobooth program watch the folder and will popup the image once it is transferred from camera to the laptop's folder.

Overall dslrBooth is an amazing program for photographers who want to keep it old school. If you have a decent camera, studio light, and a laptop laying around and a wedding or a party coming up, then grabbing a copy of dslrBooth is a no-brainer.

I am trying to record a lecture using Photo Booth on my Macbook but I want to be able to record what the professor has on the board. Unfortunately, photobooth seems to have a mirror image, so that all the writing is reversed. How do I get the camera to be a normal non-mirror camera?

Be aware that the Sony VAIO laptop and desktop business line is being discontinued: -vaio-computers-category-template_sny_helpdesk_vaio_computers_main_category?article=component_sny_helpdesk_vaiocomputers_farewell

The ability to customize the user experience is another area where this photobooth shines. The main software that is used to control everything has so many different aspects to it that it would be impossible to go over them all in this review. One of the stand out features that really drew me to the booth was the social media aspect. You can link the booth to facebook, twitter, email, and SMS. With Facebook you can have the booth setup to auto share each image directly to your page or you can give the user the option to login to their facebook page from the booth and share the image directly to their personal account. You can even prompt a user to give your facebook page a like as they are posting the image.

The photobooth from Photobooth Supply Co is a great looking and great handling booth. They are super easy to use and the social media integration not only makes your life easy, but can also land you more clients. Although the price may seem high, most photographers invest just as much money in gear upgrades and additions in a single year. Unfortunately, these upgrades very rarely help the photographer increase their income. If you are in the market for a photobooth, I highly recommend taking a look at Photobooth Supply Co.

I totally agree Matt. I checked out their website hoping you could buy the metal box on a pole piece but it looks like they only sell replacement parts to existing customers. Most of us already own a strobe, a laptop, and honestly a 4+ year old DSLR is plenty good for a photobooth. It sucks they require you to buy all that gear you probably already own.

This seems fine for someone just starting out. But it's laughably overpriced for established photographers sitting on an older tablet and camera.

The large group shot shows the deficiencies in the system. Every open air photobooth I've done winds up having some shots with 20+ people. The ones in the back row are so underexposed. Would the strobe keep up with moving everyone back? Would a larger diffuser topple over?

A good photobooth design has to use the inverse square law to account for light fall off. I personally like my lighting source to be off to the side a bit more although I do use a very hard light source directly over the camera from time to time (it's a cool look). The trick to it is you need your light far away from the background. If you set your key light say 20' off the background or the ideal standing location then the single light will light everyone fairly even because the fall off is not so great. The problem with a setup like this is that your camera has to be the same distance as your light which then requires you to zoom in which often lowers your dof. There is a very specific sweet spot between the location of your camera and light to give you the best lighting while maintaining the best DOF. 17dc91bb1f

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