If you want to take a picture, turn off lights and bring in a normal CFL or incandescent etc. A black background behind the focus of picture can help too. i may be misunderstanding what you ask...
If i am misunderstanding: They look great, while not seeing color correctly, so a bit limited. LEaves are nice and healthy, broad, large etc... New growth fills in color quickly etc...
As long as you don't see any darkness creeping up on the plant, it looks perfectly healthy from pictures.
You could try removing some of the largest leaves at top of canopy -- if less than 21 days into bloom, many will grow back, if 7-10 days left before that point. Don't over do it. Only cut something off if it drastically improves light penetration to auxiliary growth that can be meaningful to harvest.
I take a lot of the top-most leaves off after about 7-10 days into bloom - more so if overcrowded. I remove a lot of the lower limbs that are 90% shaded at this point, too. The mid-level stuff i leave, even if likely fluffy. This is what i use for making bubble hash instead of trim - good trim i still include if frosty. All of that is based upon observances of non-defoliated harvests. Especially with larger, unruly plants, it helps focus resources. A well-maintained / scrogged plant may not need such techniques of all stalks are gorwing well and evenly spaced.
A completely covered canopy that doesn't allow any light below isn't optimal for harvest. Only the top 6-10" might develop thick buds. You can get this to 12-24" of thick buds on top colas with a bit more light penetration.
it's not about light on buds, but it is about light on the plant, in general. Exposed to light will cause leaf growth below and that will help power bud development below too. (just as you can cover up a node above ground with something moist that blocks off light, and it will start to grow roots) it merely reacts to the environement in a compartmentalized way. Observe cause and effect and manipulate it to you rneeds.