I feel it will be quite hard to get a printable version via pp in this photo. The variation in glare from right to left is too great unless you are willing to spend quite some time cloning and blending with levels. I also tried to implement a quick and not very good "polarising" effect in PS to not much avail; anyway you should have used a real polarising filter in the first place.
next time use an UV filter
Or, as an alternative to the circular polarising filter (perhaps this is what Colin meant); move the car somewhere where it is shaded from direct overhead light, e.g. under a roof or canopy of some kind, but with sufficient frontal light to illuminate the occupants. That way you'll get the same effect on windscreen as the tree and building have given on either side of this shot.
Thanks, everyone. Looks like there is no hope. It improved a lot when I played with the sliders in ACR but I think it is still too faded.
This was with grandpa last year, no way I can shoot it again... If I was going to do it again, I would definitely wash the windshield...
About moving the car, I am sure the car is not parked there anymore but again I can't go back.
About CPL, my experience tells me that it is actually very helpful. We can all wait for the results of Dave's experiment...
Ah, slight confession ... it'll have to wait until tomorrow - I got side-tracked and took several hundred of migrating birds instead (while the sun shone) this afternoonOriginally Posted by Alis
Just trying to identify them ...
CPL's will only remove about 85% of most reflections even when properly used. It will not removed 100% of reflections. If you want to show formally within the car with people, a reflector to bounce light into the car and/or fill flash is normally used. Cars with brighter interiors are somewhat easily to work in than darker ones.
If you really think about it, this is the reason why many photographers prefer to shoot subjects( within closed environment cars) to shoot them with the half in and out of car with the door open. Or the door closed with the them leaning towards an open window.
But it's perfectly ok for you to take a "snapshot" of a moment of your dad and his grandson enjoying themselves in timeless print.
Ali,
You reminded me of a shot taken by Joe McNally in his excellent new book The Hot Shoe Diaries ... (he attached a camera with a WA lens to a tripod arm on the front of the fire engine, a couple of flashes with gels inside the cab - and another on top)
Shame, I thought we were trying to improve/salvage something that was unrepeatable, therefore, while it can't aspire to our normal technical standards, the content was worth the effort.
As an exercise in making it look like a polariser had been used, under less than ideal circumstances (the trees and building), I was reasonably pleased with it.