OK, now I have a question. I thought to idea of using polarized gels on the
light source required polarization on the lens. I have thought about trying
this a T28 twin flash, but I have always thought the light source would need
to be polarized in one direction and the lens needs to be polarized in the
opposite direction to cancel the glare. This is most likely incorrect, but
I have been trying to think of ways to reduce glare in macro photography.
Any help?
Dean
-----Original Message-----
From: Walt Wayman [mailto:hiwayman@xxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2005 11:12 AM
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [OM] Re: Lighting question
Now THAT'S real photography! Sometimes size is what matters most.
Walt, who's actually used an 8x10, but never more than 50 yards from the
car. :-)
--
"Anything more than 500 yards from
the car just isn't photogenic." --
Edward Weston
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: Stephen Troy <sctroy@xxxxxxxxx>
> My brother shoots artwork professionally - two strobes at 45 degree angles
> with polarizing gels on each. He doesn't use an E-1 though - he uses an
8x10.
>
> Steve Troy
>
>
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