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Scanning vs Photographing
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Posted
Weather permitting, I take a photo outside in a constant light, definitely not sunshine! If only we had sunshine!
I put it on the ground, and stand over it.
I’m still getting to grips with my latest camera, a Nikon DSLR which gives me large MB hi-res images for magazine reproduction.
I use Photoshop on my iMac for my post digital editing, Photoshop CS2 used to be a free download for Android, that has everything you will need.
Posted
Most paintings, on the floor, standing over them with a camera in daylight though not bright sunshine. Sometimes, I even manage to leave my big toe out of the photo.
Smaller drawings, on the scanner, usually. Camera shake is a problem - usually resolved by taking several deep breaths beforehand: oddly enough, and I wouldn't recommend this, some of my best photographs of paintings were taken when I was slightly sozzled.
Posted
I-pads are wonderful at putting perspective distortions to right. You can do it straight from your photo library, e.g. make the bottom or to wider, make the left or right longer, straighten the horizon - all in the crop mode. It is so much more difficult in photoshop. Getting white right is a bit harder, but not too difficult. It recognises all whites as overexposed and greys them up. So the first thing to do after taking the photo is increase the exposure and then increase contrast. It would be really nice if someone could invent the equivalent of a washing powder for pix with lots of white.
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