Richard
--
Email at the above address or theblind...@hotmail.com .
It has taken me a lifetime to recognize when I should NOT feel obligated to
make a photograph (Ansel Adams).
bob berg <suga...@usa.com> wrote in message
news:392c50fe....@news1.usenetserver.com...
> As a photographer amateur I was mainly doing outdoor photography.
> Almost no experience with use of studio lights. Since a friend asked
> me to 'digitize' his paintings I've been thinking how to do it. In mid
> February I saw in this newsgroup a post by poster AldenPhoto. In his
> post he perfectly explains how to shoot oil paintings with tungsten
> light. Here you have the post:
>
> "I wouldnt rely on available light. There are too many color
> variables, and you
> will not get a very accurate painting color. Use tungsten film, and
> two
> tungsten lights, rated at 3200 Kelvin ( the lights and the film are
> matched at
> 3200) Wait until dark to shoot to avoid daylight blue spilling in. The
> standard
> non glare copy lighting is acheived by placing each light at a 45
> degree angle
> from the painting, one on your right, one on your left. Camera is dead
> center.
> Make sure the lights do not spill into your lens, use a shade of any
> kind, and
> adjust the angle of the lights visually to reduce any glare. Take a
> meter
> reading to make sure the lights are coming in at basically the same
> power, and
> have them pulled back far enough to cover the painting evenly,
> avoiding spot
> light falloff. That should put you in good shape. Hopefully you have a
> tripod,
> because the exposures will be slow. And remember a lenses sharpest
> aperature is
> usually two stops down from the widest opening. Also if you ever do
> this for a
> living you might want to switch to strobe so you can shoot during the
> day. Good
> Luck."
>
> After reading his post I have decided to go with tungsten lights. In a
> local photo shop i ordered theTota-light with two sets of bulbs, 500W
> and 750W. At the same, they advised me to use a polarizing filter on
> the camera lens and on the light as well to achieve the standard non
> glare copy lighting. To get lights at a 45 degree angle i would
> measure, for instance, 128" from the center of the painting and then
> from that point 64" on my left and 64" on my right. On that points I
> would put the lights. Camera is always at the center. Unfortunately I
> can not get the non glare photo. By turning polarizer on the camera
> lens I would get almost the non glare shoot. But there is still some
> glare. It stays on the vertical edges of paintings. I've been trying
> to repositioning lights but if I even see through the lenses that
> there is no glare when i see slides it's still present on the very
> oily spots.
> I assume that problem comes from wrong, or not perfect lights
> positioning. Is there any formula or other practical method how to
> properly position lights.
> I would very much appreciate any help on this matter because I can not
> move on.
> Thanks in advance
>
> Bob Berg
>
>