Artyczar
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I'm sure we all have our own way of photographing our art. A lot of times, I hire a professional. They have all the right equipment and lighting (namely those Tungsten lights). But I can't always afford that.
I have found that photographing the art outside is best, for me. Always against a flat, neutral background, in even shade. The sun has to be at either 11:00 AM or 1:00 PM, depending on how the art is facing, but not directly above. The sun can be behind or to either side of me, just as long as I can see the camera (that helps!) and the painting/art is in the even shade. An overcast day can sometimes work too, but I'll have to brighten the images a bit in Photoshop.
I always, always, use a tripod. That might be most important thing, otherwise, I might as well not take the pics at all. I used to use an SLR, but now I just shoot digital and keep the setting on auto. It works great, as long as you have a good lens. A good lens is important too.
How do you do it? Inside? Outside?
I have found that photographing the art outside is best, for me. Always against a flat, neutral background, in even shade. The sun has to be at either 11:00 AM or 1:00 PM, depending on how the art is facing, but not directly above. The sun can be behind or to either side of me, just as long as I can see the camera (that helps!) and the painting/art is in the even shade. An overcast day can sometimes work too, but I'll have to brighten the images a bit in Photoshop.
I always, always, use a tripod. That might be most important thing, otherwise, I might as well not take the pics at all. I used to use an SLR, but now I just shoot digital and keep the setting on auto. It works great, as long as you have a good lens. A good lens is important too.
How do you do it? Inside? Outside?
The advantage of digital is if it gets messed up, it's easy to correct or start over. That's my two cents, hope the read was worth it.
You said it.