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Replies: 22 / Views: 8,256 |
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Rest in Peace
United States
1729 Posts |
"Macro" translates roughly to "larger than life." A macro lens will allow you to photograph images and then display them at larger than the original size.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1534 Posts |
Quote: A macro lens will allow you to photograph images and then display them at larger than the original size. I agree, it's a setting on cameras that will allow you to focus close to the coin. Quote: wheatguy, How do you get the solid black backgrounds in your scans? After I take the photos, I upload them to my computer and roundly crop the coin out of the picture in Photoscape, and I have the background color set to black.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts |
this is the camera I use and as I have said many times before I paid like 25.00 for mine a few years ago and it does a great job with pictures of coins and other numismatics http://cgi.ebay.com/JVC-3-3-Mega-Pi...em3a57cc53e4 Even if the battery doesn't hold a charge you can hook the power cable to the charger and still use the camera. Here is one I took with this same camera  it is great for closeups also  It is super easy to use and its macro setting is awesome considering I hardly ever use a tripod and my images are never blurry. it is only 3.3 MP so it may not work all that great out in the world but for taking pictures of coins this camera has done everything I need it to do and them some. I bought a 8MP Sony and I still use this one every time because the Sony can't touch this one when it comes to getting a close shot of a particular area of the coin
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1248 Posts |
Black ( any color)background on either photos or scans Camera: put the coin on a black (or?) background Scanner: scotch tape a black sheet of paper on the lid of your scanner.... simple.... that will be 3 bucks plus tax....( do not take FeePal)lolololo
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Valued Member
United States
250 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
193 Posts |
I bought a Kodak C183 easy shre 14 mp camera at Walmarts on black Friday for $60.00 that does a very good job for all kinds of pics. has multiple settings and a good macro function. Or you can leave it on the default setting for real easy point and shoot photography
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
4227 Posts |
I have a Canon SD780IS as well and am very happy with it for the "real world" and coins.
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Moderator
 United States
16679 Posts |
I use an Olympus 500UZ and have been very happy with it. It's a few years old, but still does the job with macro and super macro, little more than your budget though. The Canon mentioned above would be a great choice.
swcoin.ecrater.com
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1164 Posts |
Thanks for the help people...I didn't even have to start a new thread!
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Valued Member
United States
84 Posts |
I'm brand new to taking coin pictures. Ultimately, my goal is to learn to take and post some respectable-looking pictures of my slabbed coins for my registry set (a modestly-valued collection). I have purchased a small copy stand, 'EZ cube' and light panel. Online and in print, I have found a healthy amount of information for how to use these items (and other beginning setups).
But (oddly to me) I'm having a really hard time finding any recent, specific guidance/recommendations on which point and click cameras(after some researching, I've decided to eschew SLR cameras until I get more experience, and find out if I am any good at picture taking) to buy as a beginner: as a case in point,I've been looking at the coin photography sub-forum On Coin Community. And I could not find any newer relevant thread than this one(about four years old).
I'm hoping some more experienced members/moderators might happen across this old thread and be kind/helpful enough to recommend camera models for a newby with my goals. For budget constraints, I envision spending $200.00 or less on my first camera (I can afford to pay more for one, but I don't want to buy a much more expensive camera that will collect dust should I find that I don't have the aptitude for using it (and achieving my goals). Thank you for sharing your recommendations:)
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Moderator
 United States
23522 Posts |
Well, I happened across this thread, because your post put it at the top of the page.  Here's some considerations for you: P&S cameras with coins represent a level of compromise ranging from significant to impossible. Some are never going to do well at coin imaging, and others (almost all the others) require very specific lighting and technique to get where you want them to go. It's a frustrating process, especially for a beginner who knows relatively little about the nuts and bolts of photography. The whole purpose of the more expensive, bespoke rigs you see discussed here is to broaden that sweet spot. In addition to creating higher-quality images, they're far easier to use to create those images. And the only compromise is that you need to learn the fundamentals of photography in general, which is mechanical in nature and not artistic - anyone can learn these things. Just something to think about. My usual advice to someone interested in P&S shooting is to find an older, used model. It's counterintuitive, but you want fewer megapixels (far less noisy than today's 15MP+ sensors). You want a specific Macro function and a minimum focusing distance of under 2". You want a shorter zoom, not a longer - longer zoom lenses in P&S cameras represent optical compromises which usually show up in lesser Macro capability; the average P&S user simply doesn't care about Macro and they build them to the demographic. You want as much manual control as possible - maybe the thing will take good coin images on full Automatic, but you can't plan on it. And in order to appropriately leverage those manual controls, you need the same level of knowledge that the more expensive rigs require. You can expect to need to place the camera no more than 4" from the subject, probably closer. This seriously compromises lighting options, one of the major shortcomings of a P&S. With all that said, if your only purpose is to create full-face images for a Registry Set, you might not do too badly with a P&S. Heck, an iPhone is capable of amazing quality for imaging of this type - have a look here: https://goccf.com/t/160092More than happy to help with any questions this post might have created in your mind.
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Valued Member
United States
84 Posts |
SsuperDdave, Thank you for the informative post (I appreciate your taking the time to explain some important concepts/considerations to me). I guess that I was operating under a false premise: I thought that point and click cameras were easier to learn than their SLR counterparts. My thinking was that I would build myself up for success by learning to use a point and click and then (after encountering some good results, perhaps one day expanding to learn SLR cameras and more complex coin photo shooting. If I understand you correctly, using a point and click can be every bit as difficult (re: frustrating) to learn:( Sigh.....Your post made me realize that I have been spending the whole weekend shopping for the completely wrong types of point and click cameras (high resolution, high zoom, etc.). I will now search ebay and other marketplaces for older, used, shorter zoom, good macro cameras. If you had to throw out a few names of these older suitable models, what would some be? Your point about learning the fundamentals of photography being more of a technical, rote, mechanical exercise as opposed to an artistic/creative one gives me some hope (I am absolutely hopeless when it comes to the latter, but I do OK with following assembly instructions for products, etc.). At some point, does researching cameras reach a point of diminishing returns? I'm starting to feel overloaded (and a bit dejected [not a good sign for this early stage in the process, I know] after spending hours and hours looking through the listings and reviews of cameras (and having nothing to show for it. There's a part of me that thinks I should just pick a camera I think might be suitable, buy it (leaving my reservations behind), attach it to my copy stand and start shooting darn it. Experimentation is a big part of learning, yes? LOL, If I get all black or out of focus pictures, I'll know that I have more work to do still (and/or I've bought the wrong camera). In all seriousness, though, thanks again for sharing your insights.
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Valued Member
Australia
90 Posts |
sturmgrenadier For your purpose I would suggest you take a very close look at the Canon Powershot G series. A G7,G8, G9 or G10 not a later model. This little camera has Live View shooting capability. (The only P&S to have this feature, to my knowledge)
Plus it's quite a good little carry round camera.
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New Member
United States
20 Posts |
i like Canon so much but everyone said Nikon has better color contrast. whats your opinion?
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
4038 Posts |
It depends on the camera model. Saying that Nikon has better color contrast than Canon is like saying Fords get better gas mileage than Chevys.
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