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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Misc
A Bit About Dental Photography
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<blockquote data-quote="user name" data-source="post: 184160" data-attributes="member: 1719"><p>I visited your website. Very nice.</p><p></p><p>Would you please explain how and why a 'gray card' is used?</p><p></p><p>Also..when we look at teeth to take a shade, the color of lighting is so important, but what about the color of a flash? Is there any difference in the spectrum of different flashes, and what type of lighting is it comparable to? </p><p></p><p>When I shoot on either manual or aperture priority, my photos look nearly identical, but one is usually just a slight bit brighter. Do you have a preference on shooting modes, and do you always use a filter to soften the flash?</p><p></p><p>Lastly, I think it ties in to the gray card thing...how do we know when a photo we took is accurately represented on the computer screen? Is there a particular software that you like to adjust the photos, and does the gray card or some other test pattern that could be photographed get used to dial in the screen or each photo?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="user name, post: 184160, member: 1719"] I visited your website. Very nice. Would you please explain how and why a 'gray card' is used? Also..when we look at teeth to take a shade, the color of lighting is so important, but what about the color of a flash? Is there any difference in the spectrum of different flashes, and what type of lighting is it comparable to? When I shoot on either manual or aperture priority, my photos look nearly identical, but one is usually just a slight bit brighter. Do you have a preference on shooting modes, and do you always use a filter to soften the flash? Lastly, I think it ties in to the gray card thing...how do we know when a photo we took is accurately represented on the computer screen? Is there a particular software that you like to adjust the photos, and does the gray card or some other test pattern that could be photographed get used to dial in the screen or each photo? [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Misc
A Bit About Dental Photography
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