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		 Tips on store front and inside photographyJust been hired to photograph a shop for a business. Any tips?
 Thanks 
 
 WA lens in & outside shooting. Birddog114
 VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace 
 Cigars shops around here are very dark and gloomy, so you  may want to bring a nice flash unit if you've got one, probably a wide angle zoon also since im guessing it may not be a huge place either, I think itd be cool to get a shot of the owner or someone smokin a cigar with the smoke billowing, just my two cents based on the cigar shops ive seen here in the US,
 ~William Nikon D70s, Nikkor 18-70 3.5-5-6 DX AF-S, Nikkor 80-200 2.8D ED, Nikkor 60 2.8D Micro, SB-600 Flash, Kingston 1GB CF card.
 Http://www.WBurnett.com 
 make sure you get a shot or two with lots of customers in it even if you have  to find extra people to make it look popular (make sure they smile   ) 
 Use a heavy duty tripod and a good ballhead.
 Shoot vertical shots for stitching together as a panorama. It'll make the place look huge. Use available light with the display cases illuminated, incident metering if you can, and the one constant set of exposure/wb etc settings for these shots. g. Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet 
 Yeah a dark store shot would be good. There wont be any customers since they are finishing it up. At least that was what the manager said.
 Tripod is a must! Esp with the camera shake I will have on the day! So nervous. Birddog, the 18-70 will do for the shot? I think I need to capture some element of martin place with the store. But dunno where exactly it is located. Will need to do some homework on the location. I dont even know how much I should charge them. Might do it for free and add it to my portfolio. Its only an hour of work. 
 nito,
 The 12-24 is perfect, 18-70 is not wide enough. You can take my Nikkor 12-24 for the job. Birddog114
 VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace 
 
 Should be fine. What will the shots be used for? Print media? Website? 
 Yes, that would be good. 
 Famous last words. Count on two in-store and environs. Add at least four for PP g. Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet 
 You should definitely charge something - people never appreciate what they get for free. Even if you charge a few hundred. As Gary says - as well as the photo time, there's PP time too. And make sure thay understand you own the images and sort out what they can and can't use them for in advance (and put it in writing) Peter Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com *** 
 
 I see your point peter. It would be better to charge. Esp since there will be quite a lot of PP work. 
 hi
 look out for reflection on windows and glass. sometimes your own. hope to see some of the work christian check my website>> http://www.6701.sunpixs.com 
 
 Why incident metering Gary? What advantages will that give you over using in camera metering? Andrew 
 Andrew,
 Inicident is a tad more accurate (IMHO) because it takes any colouration or shading (of the subject) out of the exposure reading. Remember that in setting exposure you're taking a reading of the light falling on the subject, but you're usually doing this with a reflected light reading. If your subject has a high (or low) level of reflectance, then that will affect the reading that you're getting, and you then need to calculate or otherwise determine some compensatory factrs to address that situation. With an incident reading, you just decide what the primary subject is (or subjects are) and away you go. For a studio (or fixed light scenario) I find it's a far more workable scenario. g. Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet 
 
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