my boyfriend made a still life table out of flexi-glass for me. We saw
one in a lighting store and determined that he could easily make one
for me for 1/4 of the price at least.
He finished the table yesterday and I tested it last night. I had
trouble getting rid of the reflection of the item I was photographing.
The reflection was directly below the item. I tried moving the
lighting, but that didn't seem to help much.
Is the reflection there because the flexi-glass is too glossy, or is
my lighting not strong enough (I'm using two 3200k incadescent bulbs
with an 80a filter on my camera)? I also read that when using a table
of this sort, the item needs to be a few inches above the bottom of
the table. If that's the case, what would be the best way to do that?
I would just use seamless paper, but he put alot of work into this and
I'd like to use it.
Thanks in advance for your advice-
Kerri
"kerri" <ke...@readtheingredients.com> wrote in message
news:78587aab.02030...@posting.google.com...
Kerri,
Because of the Plexi's surface. Try a Polarizing filter.
--
Robert S Ely
rse...@optonline.net
rs...@dhs.state.nj.us
Work Phone:1-609-894-4057
Work FAX:1-609-894-4048
ICQ:33390750
I was looking around the web and it seems that shining a light
underneath the table would help. I was using a polarizing filter, but
that didn't get rid of the refletion entirely.
thanks!
"Hank Scorpio" <hanks...@sympatico.caNOSPAM> wrote in message news:<atQh8.18263$7Y4.2...@news20.bellglobal.com>...