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Photography Q&A
Reducing window glare
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<blockquote data-quote="Whiskeyman" data-source="post: 432446" data-attributes="member: 13556"><p>I just attended a presentation on architectural photography from Al Audleman (<a href="http://www.alaudleman.com" target="_blank">ASA Photo</a>). </p><p></p><p>He covered this exact topic, and told us that we can do this however we want to, but he would take as few as two exposures: one inside (exposed for the inside) and another from outside, of the same outside scene. Layer them in Photoshop, and apply masks, and you don't need interior photo lights. If you have more than one color of lighting on the interior shot, take extra interior shots for each additional color temperature, and apply selective color temperature corrections and masks to the interior shot as well. His experience is that this is much easier and takes much less time than setting up the required lighting inside.</p><p></p><p>WM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Whiskeyman, post: 432446, member: 13556"] I just attended a presentation on architectural photography from Al Audleman ([url=http://www.alaudleman.com]ASA Photo[/url]). He covered this exact topic, and told us that we can do this however we want to, but he would take as few as two exposures: one inside (exposed for the inside) and another from outside, of the same outside scene. Layer them in Photoshop, and apply masks, and you don't need interior photo lights. If you have more than one color of lighting on the interior shot, take extra interior shots for each additional color temperature, and apply selective color temperature corrections and masks to the interior shot as well. His experience is that this is much easier and takes much less time than setting up the required lighting inside. WM [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Reducing window glare
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