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Coin Pictures


Guest Stujoe

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There's my problem. My digital is a Canon powershot A200, kind of a cheepie. My good camera is a Nikon, but it's a SLR.

 

Of course it's more likely the user :ninja:

 

I used to have a Fuji 2000-something that I gave to my wife when I got the new one a year or two ago. It gave ok pictures but I was never able to get the look I wanted. I blame it all on the camera. ;)

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Wish I could figure out a way to get rid of the hot spots and still make it look lifelike and show lustre.

 

Try diffusing the light by placing white material of some kind over the lights ... an old T-shirt, a sheet of printer paper ... something that still lets all the light thru, but the hot spots won't be there anymore. Just watch it if the lights are really hot :ninja:

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Thanks for the tip! It did soften it up a bit. I will have to play around with that too.

 

T-shirt:

washdifuse.jpg

 

Nothing:

wqso.jpg

 

BTW: I wish I could take as good of pics as yours are!

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Wow Stujoe. Those are some nice pictures! I'll have to try that technique using three lamps. That might be my problem with having super white pictures.

 

If you haven't seen my coin grading challenge pictures.....please do. It will make you feel better!

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Wow Stujoe. Those are some nice pictures!

 

Thanks! I think I am getting better with them and the best thing is, I am not needing to take a hundred pictures of each coin to get results! :ninja:

 

 

I'll have to try that technique using three lamps. That might be my problem with having super white pictures.

 

If you haven't seen my coin grading challenge pictures.....please do. It will make you feel better!

 

 

That last Barber pic has a bit of glare off the 2x2 but it is not too bad in that regard. I have that problem too. With an extra light, you might be able to angle them so it doesn't reflect and still have enough light to illuminate well. AuldeFartte's diffusion technique could work for you too.

 

The other thing is: Are you doing it freehand or using a stand? If freehand, make sure you stabilize your hands/arms real good while holding the camers to give them a stable base. That really helps me with focusing and sharpness.

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Now, THAT is really cool, Stu :ninja:

 

... and thanks for the nice compliment ;)

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Now, THAT is really cool, Stu  :ninja:

 

... and thanks for the nice compliment  ;)

 

You have probably seen this from one of the pCGS posters but others might not have:

 

http://www.coingallery.org/VirtualGallery.html

 

He has some serious talent in photo maipulation!

 

This is one of my favorites!

 

http://www.coingallery.org/TooledMorgan.html

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To remove the hot spots and still have good lighting you need a diffuser for the lightsource. Ever notice in the photo studio, the flash doesn't point at you? It shoots backwards onto a sheet or umbrella thingy. Try using a brighter light source, but then not letting it light the coin directly. Paper is actually a pretty good diffuser too, but you need a bright light to put enough lumens through it. Then you could point directly at the coin from a few different angles.

With all that said, I don't bother myself. Too much work unless you really need an outstanding picture for something.

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Too much work unless you really need an outstanding picture for something.

 

Thanks for the tips!

 

My problem is that I always want an outstanding picture and I get ticked off when I don't get one. It is a sickness. Coin Photo OCD, I guess. ;)

 

That's probably why I am disappointed in about every coin pic I take. I want it to look exactly like I see it in my hand. :ninja:

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For anyone who is interested, this is my setup. The metal bar going up with the holes in it is where I mount my camera facing straight down.

 

Looks like my black lamp needs a dusting. :ninja:

 

Stu, first of all, your pics look great! I like the set up. Once you use a copy stand you never want to go back to juggling tripods.

 

On using multiple lights...I do that sometimes, usually two (including the illuminated light table) and have used three. Like others have said, the more diffuse, the better. Well, as long as you can get enough light.

 

I experienced some problems mixing bulbs. Sometimes a mix of incandescent and high-intensity lamps gives me some weird color distortion. Now, I use matched temperature bulbs (they are all the same daylight spectrum bulbs).

 

Just for further discussion on the subject, here are four shots using two lamps, without (always the first) and with (always the second) the light table illuminated as the third lamp.

 

walkeras4rb.jpg

Supersized

 

walkerbs6jz.jpg

Supersized

 

walkercs6cv.jpg

Supersized

 

walkerds5dj.jpg

Supersized

 

Which look better?

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They both look good to me. Just a slightly different tone to the first ones of each set. They are incredibly well lit too!

 

I am going to show my ignorance, though. What is a ' light table'? Is that something to do with the copy stand?

 

I would love to get a real copy stand but haven't sprung the money for one. I have seen great results using them, though. Mine is kind of a cheap man's copy stand made mostly with parts I had laying around in the basement. :ninja:

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They both look good to me. Just a slightly different tone to the first ones of each set. They are incredibly well lit too!

 

I am going to show my ignorance, though. What is a ' light table'? Is that something to do with the copy stand?

 

I would love to get a real copy stand but haven't sprung the money for one. I have seen great results using them, though. Mine is kind of a cheap man's copy stand made mostly with parts I had laying around in the basement. :ninja:

 

The light table (and my set up) is pictured here Coin photography Kit It helps, I think. In the referenced pics, the one's with the light table are closer to the coin-in-hand. You can gain a reduction in dark spots, but you can also lose some detail sometimes.

 

I have seen several home-brew set ups like yours - hey if they work - great! If I had the mechanical skills, I would have tried it myself, but things that don't have keyboards are scary.

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By far, the hardest coins to photograph are proof coins ( imo ). Do you take many pictures of them or not to many. Buy the way, real nice pictures. I have taken a number of pictures of proof coins, mainly eagles, and I dont think I do a half bad job. Here is a picture and you guys tell me what you think. By the way I have a Fuji 7000s camera that I take my pictures with. :ninja:

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By far, the hardest coins to photograph are proof coins ( imo ).  Do you take many pictures of them or not to many.  Buy the way, real nice pictures.  I have taken a number of pictures of proof coins, mainly eagles, and I dont think I do a half bad job.  Here is a picture and you guys tell me what you think.  By the way I have a Fuji 7000s camera that I take my pictures with.  :ninja:

 

Your pics are fine! I agree, proofs are very tough. The mirrors make it very difficult to get anything close to even lighting over the whole coin. If your side lighting is at the wrong angle, you will catch every single nasty surface deformation or bit of tarnish or whatever. I end up taking a lot of different shots, which of course is a great thing about digital cameras. Here are a couple that are about as good as I can do right now.

 

ep1974s8007cs.jpg

 

proofobv25a1ni.jpg

 

 

1979proof9uw.jpg

 

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