Photographing/Digitalising Tintypes and Polaroids with Hasselblad H5D; rig and lighting questions.

Joined
Feb 27, 2016
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England
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Hi folks

About six months ago I started out on my wet plate adventure and to this point I am loving it! After months of shooting, it has just dawned on my I have a plethora of plates I am needing to digitalise to use for projects and web based exhibition.

My only digital kit I have now is a Hasselblad H5D. I see some online who have used a flatbed scanner to digitalise there plates. and those who use digital camera rigs to use the high resolution of those sensors for the digitalisation process. I will be aiming to use the later of those two.

I’m going to construct a welded metal rig to hold the camera at a 90 degree, down facing angle toward a flat surface where the plate would be located. The distance between the flat surface and the camera will obviously be at a minimum of the camera closest focusing distance once I determine which lens would work best for this purpose. I would also like to use this to digitalise my vast polaroid collection also, so I may look at making it somewhat more adjustable also.

(Incase anyone was wondering the camera will be removable and insertable as and when I need to.)

I have a H100mm and H80mm, as well as a CF180mm with a CF/H adaptor which I would be using to photograph the plates - so obviously the focusing distance will not be to close. This is what brings me to my main concern for this setup; lighting. Do people using this method of photographing plates use macro/close up style flashes, or is it possible to simply use a couple well-diffused flashguns to get that even, crisp lighting thats essential to the ‘photographic scanning’? With the lenses I will be using, I am conscious that the minimum/maximum distance for any macro, close-up lighting may be an issue to achieve the exposure required, and thats the crucial point…

So, is my plan conceivable and going to work, or am I trying to build a boat with masonry tools, so to speak?

Look forward to hearing your information suggestions and help.

Thanks again all

Nathan
 

MattKing

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Of course, the digital parts of your question are strictly off topic for APUG, but in case this thread gets closed for that reason, I take it you are asking essentially about how to light the tintypes and Polaroids in order to photograph them, that essential part should be okay.

My question would be whether you can use polarized light sources and a polarizing filter to minimize reflections and flare.
 
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