Photographing glass objects is one of those tasks that fall into the "Advanced" category. It's all in the lighting ... and an on-camera flash is definitely the worst way to go! Your friend should take a look at some of the excellent tutorials that are available "on the web," particularly regarding lighting. A search with your friendly local search engine should provide many references. Some suggested reading would probably be the 'free' tutorials at 'The Web Photo School.' Even though they do not directly address photographing glass objects, several of them would apply quite nicely. http://www.webphotoschool.com/Lesson_Library/Free_Lessons/in dex.html ----- Original Message ----- From: "Shyrell Melara" <shyrellmelara@xxxxxxxxx> To: "List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students" <photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 11:11 AM Subject: Question from another group > Hi Everyone, > > I'm signed on with a craft group and got a question I can't answer. This lady wants to photograph her painted glass projects and is trying to eliminate the flash glare from her digital camera. All replies will be greatly appreciated. Thanks! Shyrell > > >From acraftbizconnection email group: > --------------------------------- > Thank you Shyrell! > > --- what kind of setting I should use for my digital camera when photographing the pieces? It's a kodak ls443 with a 3xoptical lens. What would relate to the fast speed film in a digital? THANKS for any help you can give! > > -- > _______________________________________________ > NEW! Lycos Dating Search. The only place to search multiple dating sites at once. > http://datingsearch.lycos.com >