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Scar Photography
Quality photographs of the original injuries are crucial in the later
stages of the case, when everything is healed and surgically corrected.
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Scar photography can be
the easiest or most difficult assignment in legal photography and is the
type of assignment that separates the men from the boys. (Is there a politically
correct version of this one?)
Acute scarring is the
easiest because the scabs, stitches and fresh wounds are extremely visible.
Residual scarring presents the real challenge because there are many times
when the wounds heal well and it may take a slight difference in viewing
angle and lighting to see the true nature of the cosmetic defect.
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Scales are included in scar photographs to avoid the possibility of
misrepresentation.
Residual scarring presents the real challenge because there are
many times when the wounds heal well and it may take a slight difference
in viewing angle and lighting to see the true nature of the cosmetic
defect.
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The Evidence Store has been
doing this type of work for both insurance companies and plaintiff's attorneys
for twenty-five years, and we pride ourselves in creating photographs that
truly document how the injured area will appear to a viewer.
We offer a special "studio
package" for scar photography that includes the session, film, processing,
and two sets of larger 5x7 prints for $125.00. Extensive scarring over
multiple areas of the body, such as in burn cases, will be billed higher,
but most will fall into the base rate. We can deliver the photos in two
sets of numbered books, or give you one set in a book and one set loose
for you to chose those you want to send on for review.
If your case goes to
trial, we recommend making a composite exhibit of the "before" and "after"
photos. This gives the trial attorney a more focused way of presenting
the images to a jury, as opposed to passing around loose prints. With
the composite on an easel, the trial attorney can point to each area in
each photo as needed, with all the jurors seeing the material at the same
time. This assures that they are looking at what YOU want them to look
at, and that they know WHAT they need to know about the injuries.
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