Photographing latex: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 02:47, 3 March 2024
Advice on photographing latex from LatexWiki.
- Light
- Position major light sources away from the camera but not directly to the side.
- Two or three main lighting directions are usually good:
- One leads to sharp shadows.
- Four and up can give a dull appearance and flatten the depth if their relative intensities are not balanced.
- More is better, but too much can be uncomfortable.
- Layout
- Going closer to the subject is often good - as much as your lens allows.
- Often it is good to position the main subject a bit to the side from the very centre of the image.
- Check that objects in the background do not interfere with the foreground subject (e.g. trees gowing out of people's heads etc.)
- Setting
- Poor attention to detail can spoil an otherwise great shot, remove unwanted clutter, check the background for inappropriate objects (beer bottles etc.).
- If possible, get the model to relax.
- Post processing
- Work on a copy of the original - not the original, in case you make an irreversible mistake.
- Crop the image
- Adjust light levels
- Scale to screen
- Adjust sharpness but not excessively
External links
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root