Looking for tips and tricks to prevent glare on glasses when live streaming, awesome.

You don't have to get rid of your glasses to create those perfect live streams. You just have to get rid of that glare. In this post, we will teach you how. Keep reading!

How To Prevent Glare On Glasses When Live Streaming?

Whether you are conducting a webinar or are live streaming a tutorial, glare from glasses can ruin the overall experience. Here are some handy tips to prevent that:

Change the angle

Looking toward a light source can create the perfect angle between the light, your glasses, and your camera.

What's the result?

That distracting glare on the glasses while streaming.

To eliminate the glare, adjust the angle you are shooting from. You don't need to move and change your location altogether. Just a minor shuffle, chin-drop, or head-turn can help change the angle and reduce the glare.

Adjust the glasses to prevent glare

If changing the angle doesn't help, try adjusting your glasses. You can either raise the temples or tilt the legs of the glasses slightly or shift the plane of the lenses to prevent glare on glasses. The key is to ensure that the lenses and the computer screen are no longer parallel so that the reflection is angled downwards rather than on the camera.

Usually, this trick is more than enough to get rid of that annoying glare without making you look weird. But don't bend the glasses so much that you end up looking disheveled or damaging them.

Position the lights right

Every live streamer understands the importance of lighting. But only a few know that correctly positioning the lights in your live streaming setup can help prevent glare on glasses too. This holds especially true for ring lights. You can move your ring or key lights farther and keep them equal to each other to fill-out the light source. Horizontal repositioning of the lights will improve the lighting across your face.

Can you spot that ring light on my glasses in the picture below?

It can be very distracting to people who are watching your live streams.

To avoid this, you can adjust the source of light.

If backlighting doesn't help, you can also raise the key lights to ensure that they still illuminate your setup but from a top-to-down angle. If you're using a desk lamp, you can raise its height above the streaming camera to change the angle between the light, glasses, and camera and point the reflection downwards.

That said, this tactic may lead to harsh shadows. If that happens, you can try the next tip.

Soften the light to avoid glass glare when live streaming

If changing your light source's angle produces dark shadows on your face, try softening the light. Use a second light to fill the shadows. You can also use a soft fill from a reflector or get some white foam board or Styrofoam.

A quick fix could be using some white paper sheets and sticking them to the side of a cardboard box to reflect the light. Remember, it will all stay out of view of the camera, so it doesn't need to look perfect.

Once you have that ready, point the light at it to bounce it off and prevent those harsh shadows. And it works wonderfully to prevent glare on glasses during live streaming as well.

Change your light source 

One excellent way to minimize glare from your glasses is to change the light source. Instead of bright, in-your-face lighting, use larger yet softer light sources. By increasing the size of the light source hitting you, you expand it enough that it doesn't reflect on the glasses.

Indirect lighting may also help avoid glass glare during live streaming.

If you have a window light in your live streaming studio, you may not even need extra or artificial lighting. So, go ahead, and try using the outdoor lighting. But avoid direct sunlight while you're at it. It may work wonders in reducing that pesky glare!

Pro Tip: Illuminate your live streaming set up by switching on all the lights. Maximizing the ambient lighting is a great tip to reduce the reflection on your face/glasses.

Use a polarizing filter 

A polarizing filter is another tool that can help prevent glare on glasses during your live streams. However, you must be careful while using a polarizing filter. While it may prove beneficial in removing reflected light, it may limit the amount of light your camera needs.

Dim the display light to prevent glare

Display light from your computer can also cause glare on your glasses. So, to avoid glass glare during live streaming, dim your display as low as possible. But ensure that it doesn't make it hard for you to see the other participants on the stream, find the menu or controls on your streaming app, or even read/respond to the comments on your live chat.

Don't take off those glasses!

Why take off your glasses when you can avoid glare with some easy adjustments?

We hope the tips mentioned above will help you remove glare from your glasses. If you have any other queries that you would like StreamYard to answer, leave them in the comments below. Let's make live streaming hassle-free!

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