Buff it out before shooting. A full car will just look dull.

Paul via phone

> On Oct 3, 2016, at 5:27 PM, Larry Colen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> This question is mostly for Paul, but some other people might have some good 
> suggestions:
> 
> My neighbor is trying to sell his 1970 Challenger R/T.  He's had it for 40 
> years and it's generally in pretty good shape (340 engine).  He does not, 
> however, have good photos of it.  I've offered to take some for him.  Are 
> there any tips and tricks I should know about to avoid mistakes ahead of 
> time?  I.e. long lens from a distance rather than close up with a wide lens?
> 
> The car needs to be buffed out, would I be better of getting some shots of it 
> before hand so that the color shows more than the reflections?
> 
> What about shooting the interior?   Natural light?  Maybe some flash to fill 
> so that the view outside the windows isn't blown out?
> 
> Polarizers?  Critical or not?
> 
>   Larry
> 
> -- 
> Larry Colen  [email protected] (postbox on min4est) http://red4est.com/lrc
> 
> 
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