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[OM] Shooting paintings

Subject: [OM] Shooting paintings
From: "pfranklin" <pfranklin@xxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 29 Mar 2002 15:47:03 -0800
Enrique : 
In regards to shooting oil paintings or other works of art the secret is very 
even nearly flat lighting.  That means you must use more than one strobe unless 
you have one very well filtered and very powerful strobe.  And still two 
strobes are better than one.  Also forget TTL.  You must use a flash meter (or 
else have the rare ability of reading light without one .. joke).  What you 
must do is to position the strobes until nearly every area of the painting is 
reading the same amount of light.  Obviously this will take some patience (but 
then again isn't that what good photography is all about).  

My only other advice is to take the painting out of doors on a slightly 
overcast day and position until you get identical spot readings using your OM2 
in the spot mode (of course!).  

Regardless of outdoor or indoor with strobes you should use a neutral colored 
background paper or cloth.  And if you want to be professional as possible I 
strongly suggest using polarizing filters over the light sources (or the lens 
for out door work).   Your goal should be to capture the exact color and shade 
the artist used in the painting.   Stray light will create hot spots and overly 
shadowed areas thus completely destroying the context of the artist's work. 
Shooting art work can be challenging at first.  But remember your goal is to 
capture the work to film as close as possible to the original.  

Phillip Franklin
Solana Beach, CA
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