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What Type Of Lighting Do You Use For Coin Pictures?

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 Posted 03/23/2011  8:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nybird to your friends list
I use a 90 watt bulb. I did find that the backround material (color and texture) makes a big difference also. Just try a lot of combinations till it looks great. It took me only an evening to solve the riddle.
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 Posted 04/04/2011  6:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Newbismatic to your friends list
Definitely use a tripod or a copy stand with some stationary lights... the flash on your camera isn't going to get the job done.
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 Posted 04/04/2011  6:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dch828 to your friends list

Quote:
Definitely use a tripod or a copy stand with some stationary lights... the flash on your camera isn't going to get the job done.


I absolutely hate camera flashes, or at least the ones that are built in. I'm not sure why they are so bad but they are.
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 Posted 04/05/2011  02:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list
Another member of this forum has used a Canon S5 IS to create images of staggering quality, the equal of a dSLR with dedicated Macro lens in the hands of an experienced user. Admittedly, he augmented the camera with a Canon 500D Macro attachment lens (an $80-100 investment), but it proves that your camera is quite capable of equaling the best images you will see on this forum.

Keep that in mind.

As others have already mentioned, control over the white balance setting is the key to making the "sweet spot" of good setup larger. It allows you to vary your lighting, using different angles and different shapes of bulbs. Sometimes a coin (lustrous silver) reacts far better to more vertical light placement, wanting you to have the light closer to the lens, and other coins want more angled light placement. I shoot high-angle images with MR16 Halogen bulbs, only 2" wide so I can get really close to "straight up and down," but requiring a very different white balance setting than Compact Fluorescent or regular A19 incandescents.

This is going to seem like a whole lot to learn at first. It isn't. Good coin photography is very much an area where you build knowledge step-by-step. Every step yields improvement, and on the other side you'll realize it makes a whole bunch of sense.

Everything we discuss from this point will only be about 3 things: getting the coin in focus, getting the right amount of light on the coin, and getting the camera to realize it's the right light. There are a stupid number of different things you *can* adjust to get to that point - many of them do the exact same adjustment - and that's what complicates it for the less-experienced photographer.
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 Posted 04/05/2011  04:51 am  Show Profile   Check vermontensium's eBay Listings Check vermontensium's eCrater Listings Bookmark this reply Add vermontensium to your friends list
Incandescent bulbs, (5) 60 watt, 3 feet above my kitchen table works for me. I do not use a flash!
All my photos are taken with a steady hand believe it or not, on a black matte cotton glove.
swcoin.ecrater.com
Edited by vermontensium
04/05/2011 04:52 am
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 Posted 04/07/2011  12:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add lelliott608 to your friends list
I'm glad to hear that my Canon S5 has the chops to take those kind of pictures, so thanks for all of the lighting and photography suggestions. Now it's just a matter of honing in that skill (and I may purchase a macro lens to help).

I've seen some great photos of coins on this forum and then one of the sellers on ebay that I've been admiring lately (because of the picture quality they consistently demonstrate) is Great Southern Coins. I've noted that their auction sell prices regularly seem to outpace similar coins of the same grade, and I can't help but think that the clarity of their pictures is part of the reason...
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 Posted 04/07/2011  12:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list

Quote:
I've noted that their auction sell prices regularly seem to outpace similar coins of the same grade, and I can't help but think that the clarity of their pictures is part of the reason...


True, except that the generally-held opinion around here is that they present their coins in a deceptively-flattering manner.
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 Posted 04/07/2011  12:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biggfredd to your friends list
dual low wattage halogen desk lamps, under $10 at Mal-Wart.
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 Posted 04/07/2011  1:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list
Th Lowes near me now has 6500K 23W Sylvania CFLs.

http://www.coincommunity.info/coin/...arge-013.jpg

They don't suck.
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 Posted 04/07/2011  1:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rjkingston to your friends list
Natural Daylight is always the best. That's if you have a window where you're photographing. I definitely need to upgrade my lighting situation. Most the time the sun isn't shining when I retreat to my coins.
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 Posted 04/07/2011  1:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobby131313 to your friends list

Quote:
Natural Daylight is always the best.


10 years ago maybe, not any more. Today's cameras can make just about any light work as good, or more likely, better.
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 Posted 04/07/2011  2:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rmpsrpms to your friends list
I'm very fond of the IKEA JANSJO LED Desk lamps. They have a flexible gooseneck and a good balanced color spectrum, not too blue like some "white" LEDs.
Contact me for photographic equipment or visit my home page at:
http://macrocoins.com
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 Posted 04/08/2011  10:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ham1947 to your friends list
Wish I could take photos like that. I have a Canon G9. Is there a quality macro lens available and how much $ ?
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 Posted 04/28/2011  3:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Earle42 to your friends list
See the post I just put on concerning making an inexpensive macro lens. I now need to work on my lighting and background to get better pics.
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash?
Download and read: Grading the graders
Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halves
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 Posted 04/28/2011  7:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cladhunter13 to your friends list
Took these shots with my Kodak C433 4.0MP on the macro setting with just my track lighting mounted on my wall in the living room and the cameras flash filtered by 2 pieces of white paper. Not to bad for a first test but it still need tweaking. The MS coin shows some glare. Its a learning process and I'm having fun. These pics are not adjusted in anyway except for the cropping. The color is as it was when I took the pics.

What-Type-Of-Lighting-Do-You-Use-For-Coin-Pictures?
What-Type-Of-Lighting-Do-You-Use-For-Coin-Pictures?
What-Type-Of-Lighting-Do-You-Use-For-Coin-Pictures?
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