I am trying to put some of my airbrushed pics on my computer but to no avail.They have been painted on A1 paper But I got them lamenated so When I try and take photos of them there is too much of a glare-even with the flash turned off.And as I am not a weathy man I don’t own an A1 scanner(
But wished I did).Can any one help.
Thanks for the time.
Heres a couple of things that might just (but probably won’t) work.
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Sew 5 large white cotton bed sheets together, and erect a tent in the garden/park on a sunny windless day. Take your tripod and camera to where the light will be diffuse enough to minimise / remove the glare.
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Using some wood and a flat surface construct a jig that will help you to scan the pictures using an A4 scanner before stitching them all back together in your graphic editor of choice with lots of feather and redundancy in and between the images.
Maybe I should just admit that i’m unable to help at all. 
I wish you all the best with what seems to me to be a tricky objective on a budget.
i dont know if you tried that yet, but we succeeded in doing what you want to do by taking them out and placing them into daylights shadow (of a building) to avoid to be using any artificial light or daylight coming in from windows and suchlike. it took a while until we found an angle where there was no glare at all and the edges wouldnt show perspective, but we finally succeeded. that was pre-photoshop days back then. i assume, that if you get a lil glare at, lets say lower left part of pic and turn the pic upside down without changing cameras position to take another shot and then within PS do a mirroring and erasing on separate layers - it should look allright. just a thought.
Thank you all for giving me a reply.juandel I take it that you weren’t using a digital camera.I tried the same method as you spoke of - but with a digital camera and it didn’t work.So maybe if I used a normal camera it might work.Thank you all once again.
I would also use a polarizing filter(on a 35mm camera). When you have your photos developed, you can get the prints on cd or you can then take the 35mm prints and scan them as you like. If you are not sure how the prints will turn out, then I suggest that you take your time, record what you do,(as you adjust your lighting, fstop, etc.) Then after you get your test proofs back look for the best ones and reshoot/scan.