Photographing a reflective sign

Photographing a reflective sign

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22

Original Poster:

2,375 posts

142 months

Saturday 20th April
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 26 June 2024 at 17:38

Rough101

2,143 posts

80 months

Saturday 20th April
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Turn the lights off and use a ‘tripod’ or whatever to support the phone with. A longer exposure.

Or take it off the wall and photo somewhere else.

dxg

8,629 posts

265 months

Saturday 20th April
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Polarising filter to get rid of the reflections.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/ZOMEI-Professional-Circul...

C n C

3,495 posts

226 months

Saturday 20th April
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If you're trying to lose the distracting reflections from the skylights, and you want to do it for no/minimal cost - then you could try with a large sheet of paper (something like a sheet from a flip chart).

Hold the phone as close to the sign as possible to get the sign to fill the frame, then get someone to hold up the paper just infront of your phone in a landscape orientation. Make a small hole in the middle of the paper, just a tiny bit bigger than the lens on your phone, and take the photo. This technique can also be used instead with a black paper/cloth, and is a good way to get rid of reflections off glass when (for example) trying to take photos of fish in an aquarium.


Alternatively, you could wait until it's dark, so no light from the skylights, then try positioning a desk lamp on either side of the sign at about a 30-45 degree angle to the wall, but far enough away so they are out of the picture. This should light the sign, but you shouldn't get reflections of the desk lamps. This type of arrangement is often used when taking photos of a document/print/other flat object.

ridds

8,277 posts

249 months

Saturday 20th April
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"Night-mode" on a Samsung phone.

Not sure if iPhone have a similar mode.

It'll come out perfect.

tog

4,600 posts

233 months

Thursday 25th April
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A long lens will give you a smaller area in the reflection, and a wide aperture will render any reflection out of focus. Place something black (anything from Colorama to a jumper) to fill the reflection and it shouldn't appear. Avoid shining direct light on your sign or you will get shadows of the text onto the background.

ETA Just saw the bit about only using a phone so don't worry about the wide aperture part. But if you stand back a bit and zoom in it should still work, at the cost of some reduced quality. Zooming in reduces the angle of view in the reflection and the key thing is managing what is reflected - something dark with little light on it filling the reflection should just disappear.

Edited by tog on Thursday 25th April 23:43

22

Original Poster:

2,375 posts

142 months

Friday 26th April
quotequote all
Thanks all. I think, in hindsight, my efforts were 'there and then' when the sign went up. Some improved attempts with some of the tips here and different times of day. Appreciated.