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Old August 8th 06, 12:12 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
Roger N. Clark (change username to rnclark)
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Default Measurung dynamic range...

Bill Funk wrote:
On Mon, 07 Aug 2006 12:27:11 -0700, "Roger N. Clark (change username
to rnclark)" wrote:


Volker Hetzer wrote:

Roger N. Clark (change username to rnclark) wrote:


A good way to make a light trap is a cone painted with
glossy black paint. The reflections from the painted surface
go deeper into the cone.

So the camera looks into the pointy end?
Otherwise it seems to me that the light gets reflected back.


Yes. Think of an ice-cream cone. Look at the inside,
and paint it glossy black. A machined metal (like aluminum)
works very well.

Roger



Wouldn't machined (or even moreso, polished) metal reflect much more
light?
Why did you pick glossy black?


You need something to absorb the light. Each reflection
absorbs ~95% of the light, and the remaining gets reflected
further into the cone. If you use flat black, each reflection
scatters some light out of the cone. A polished aluminum
surface would reflect most light so most light would never be absorbed,
and eventually, after reaching the bottom, would reflect back out.
Flat black gives you both controlled absorption and controlled
reflection.

Roger