y8s
New member
- Sep 12, 2012
- 331
- 0
I'm just getting into this as a hobby and going to be cleaning up 3 cars over the next few days/weeks/months/whatever.
I've seen a lot of photos of bright lights and swirls for before shots and bright lights and no swirls for after shots, but...
What is the best technique for using a bright light source for capturing the true condition of the paint?
Things like:
Type of camera
How to focus (finger method)
Type of light source (sun, Brinkmann, LED flashlight, etc)
Where to point the light source (at the camera or somewhere else)
stuff like that.
Here's a quick shot i took with my phone with the flash using my finger:
I've also taken a bunch of shots with my DSLR at night using a bright LED flashlight. I could see the swirls but it was dark so it was a pain. Also the cars were dirty so... not great comparison starting points.
Anyway, the question is mostly for Mike since he's the guy posting so many pro level pictures, but anyone else with input is welcome to share!
Thanks!
Matt
I've seen a lot of photos of bright lights and swirls for before shots and bright lights and no swirls for after shots, but...
What is the best technique for using a bright light source for capturing the true condition of the paint?
Things like:
Type of camera
How to focus (finger method)
Type of light source (sun, Brinkmann, LED flashlight, etc)
Where to point the light source (at the camera or somewhere else)
stuff like that.
Here's a quick shot i took with my phone with the flash using my finger:

I've also taken a bunch of shots with my DSLR at night using a bright LED flashlight. I could see the swirls but it was dark so it was a pain. Also the cars were dirty so... not great comparison starting points.
Anyway, the question is mostly for Mike since he's the guy posting so many pro level pictures, but anyone else with input is welcome to share!
Thanks!
Matt