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Thread: taking photos of framed art w glass

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jun 2000
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    1

    taking photos of framed art w glass

    I have been taking photos of framed art with a digital camera to place in a cata log. The problem is I am getting a reflection in the glass of the framed item. W hat ever is behind me is showing in the glass. Is there anything I can do to avo id this? Can I do something different with the lighting? Can I put a sheet aroun d the camera to block me out and anything else in the background? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance. Todd

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Posts
    10

    taking photos of framed art w glass

    I take photos of stuff behind glass fairly often, here is my set up. I put a light with diffusion umbrellas on both sides at 45 degree angles from the object. I wrap myself and my tripod in black material and leave the rest of the room dark. this works good for me.

    doug

  3. #3

    taking photos of framed art w glass

    Todd, I have experienced the same thing and it was rather annoying! I ended up c overing every bit of bright or shiny spot with tape, mat black board or black cloth to minimize the r eflexions. Using a longer lens helps too. My camera and tripod are black, but I had to hide myself before firing! Having the right spotlights and reducing the ambient light as much as you can will help. I have n ot tested, but I guess that shooting through a dark screen would solve the problem too!

  4. #4

    taking photos of framed art w glass

    If this really was a large format question, the easy answer would be to offset the camera from the object and use the cross-front camera movement to centre the subject again, making sure that the area directly in front of the glass was dark or masked off with a black board. Otherwise, it's down to shooting through a small gap in some black curtains or similar, or the crossed polariser suggestion.

  5. #5

    taking photos of framed art w glass

    why must the picture be taken with glass? are you making these pictures? assemble them without glass and shoot them. then assemble with glass afterwards. this is what we do, and we never get glare or reflections. this is the only surefire way to get a good picture of a frame or framed picture.

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