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General Photography
Automotive
etiquette for shooting cars in public
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<blockquote data-quote="MrF" data-source="post: 259009" data-attributes="member: 10292"><p>When I post photos of my own car, I used to blur the plate. Mainly because it's not just a random license plate... it can be tied to me, or at least my username. With random cars, there's really no privacy reason. With some practice you can get pretty good at it so it's not very noticeable. I'd just use the blur tool until it's no longer legible; it's less obtrusive than a solid color paint-over.</p><p></p><p>If you watch most car commercials these days, the cars have plates that are painted the body color. It's enough so that there's something there so it doesn't look odd, but not enough that it distracts from the car.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MrF, post: 259009, member: 10292"] When I post photos of my own car, I used to blur the plate. Mainly because it's not just a random license plate... it can be tied to me, or at least my username. With random cars, there's really no privacy reason. With some practice you can get pretty good at it so it's not very noticeable. I'd just use the blur tool until it's no longer legible; it's less obtrusive than a solid color paint-over. If you watch most car commercials these days, the cars have plates that are painted the body color. It's enough so that there's something there so it doesn't look odd, but not enough that it distracts from the car. [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
Automotive
etiquette for shooting cars in public
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