Thanks,
Eric
--
Photo restoration in peaceful Chapel Hill NC
http://www.homeusers.prestel.co.uk/magor/tony
New: Selecting Your First SLR & The Grey Card Walk
The Teleconverter Page & The Night Gallery
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Before you buy.
Cliver6
"Tony Spadaro" <t__sp...@my-deja.com> wrote in message
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Good luck in your experiment.
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Thanks,
Eric
"cliver6" <cli...@mindspring.com> wrote in message
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Eric
"George Hager" <natureimgm...@home.com.invalid> wrote in message
news:04d17460...@usw-ex0108-062.remarq.com...
You have gotten some pretty good advice here. One thing that can come
back to haunt you is finding the reflection of your camera, yourself, or
your tripod in the final image.
The sure-fire way to prevent this is a trick I have been using for
years: suspend a dark, preferably black-out cloth or black velvet in
front of the camera. Have a whole small enough to let only the lens
protrude. This way you will not photograph yourself, your tripod or
camera in the reflections of the glass! I have photographed thousands of
paintings for artists and use this technique wheneve glass or acrylic
creates reflection problems.
Good luck to you.
--
Marty Knapp
ma...@martyknapp.com
http://www.martyknapp.com