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While a photograph of an oil painting will never give you the same experience as actually
seeing the original, these tips will help you get close.
Method 1 Direct sunlight
Wait until the painting dries.. Best photos are of dry or nearly dry oil paintings.
If the oil is still wet, it will shine in areas and the oil remaining in the painting
will reflect light differently than the dry areas of the painting. If your painting is
still relatively wet, try spraying the whole painting lightly with artist retouch varnish.
Please note that retouch varnish is not the same as varnish that will be applied after
6 to 12 months of drying time. Allow the artist retouch varnish to dry approximately 30 minutes
prior to photographing the painting. Go outside on a sunny day..
Sunlight greatly simplifies the photographing process. Strong sunlight will reduce the light
bouncing back from different layers of oil paint resulting in shiny and dark areas of
the painting in the photo. Lay the painting down flat on ground..
If possible, use a dark color cloth to lay the painting on to reduce color interference
and light changes. This is especially important with a darker painting or one with red tones.
Make sure that your shadow is not on the painting as you stand over it.
Point the camera straight down to get as little angle distortion as possible..
You may need to experiment with position to get the sunlight and painting in the right
position so as to have no shadow and no light bouncing around. Use a tripod if available
to reduce camera movement when adjusting the angle of the camera.
Take several shots until you are happy with the results..
You will be surprised how well this method works versus trying to take photo of oil painting
inside or in a vertical position. Method 2
Polarizing Filters Purchase a pair of sunglasses that have polarization
filtering.. Most cheap sunglasses don't.
Put them across the front of your camera's lens..
Take pictures as described above, if you can..
Thank you for watching!