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Anonymous
Made a feathered bounce card from foam sheets à la 'a better bounce card'. Works well. Yeah I know. Oldskool and I am late to the party. Only snag I have is light causing some light passing through the spectacle lenses to be thrown on the face. At first I thought it was the feather stripes on the bounce card.
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Camera-Specific Properties:Equipment MakeCanonCamera ModelCanon EOS 450DMaximum Lens Aperturef/5.7Image-Specific Properties:Horizontal Resolution300 dpiVertical Resolution300 dpiImage Created2008:11:16 06:11:31Exposure Time1/30 secF-Numberf/5.6Exposure ProgramManualISO Speed Rating100Lens Aperturef/5.6Exposure Bias0 EVMetering ModePatternFlashFlash, CompulsoryFocal Length55.00 mmRenderingNormalExposure ModeManualWhite BalanceManualScene Capture TypeStandard
>> Anonymous
I see what you mean. The spectacle lens is transmitting the light as a line near his right eye. It's not too distracting here, thankfully. I've seen the same issue crop up with sunlight and at times it can be detrimental to the image.

I have suspicions this is lifted from a forum post somewhere, but I'd be interested in hearing people's ideas for overcoming these difficulties or examples of shots with spectacles. They always seem to be an extra challenge.
>> Anonymous
that's a pretty great beard. i didn't know they came in multi-color
>> Anonymous
>>295021

That happens to a lot of guys if they are lucky enough to live long enough to get grey hairs. I know someone who has brown hair on their head and a red beard too.
>> NatureGuy !se3A3TwzdY
>>294983
Just grab the clone tool, pick the area that has the tone you want, set the flow to like 5% and paint out the line? Not hard.

>>295027
I get black and brown mixed into my red (facial hair only), but I'm 21.