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Photographing Artwork Digitally; Setting, Shooting, And Post-Processing:
Position your camera so the work fills the frame, keeping the camera perpendicular to the wall, with the sensor parallel to the art. This is more difficult than it sounds, as photographers usually compose their pictures by intuitively pointing the camera, but any deviation will cause perspective distortion in copy work. Use a bubble level to check that the artwork is true, then check and level the camera using the front of the lens or camera back. Move the tripod side to side, and elevate until your art is square in the frame. Remember to keep the zoom at its most distortion-free focal length. With the camera set on manual, bracket your exposures, giving the subject a range of exposures above and below the “correct” exposure that your camera suggests. Light artwork can be easily underexposed, and dark artwork can fool the camera into overexposing, but by shooting several frames with more and less exposure you will be sure to get one right on. Don’t rely on your camera’s LCD alone to proof your shots; the brightness of the image on it relative to the room you’re in can easily mislead you. The more you can get correct in camera, the less post-processing will be necessary and the higher the quality of the resulting image.
Three-dimensional art presents a much greater photographic challenge, as angle,
composition, and lighting must all work together to tell the story of the object.
For small items we use the Lowel Ego digital imaging light. Window light is
a possibility; it can have a wonderful wrapping quality. The big problem with
natural window light is it will change by the hour, and is totally dependent
on the weather. Use reflectors to fill your shadows where you need detail, and
use a custom white balance to compensate for the shifting color balance.
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