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Coin Pictures & Background Material

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Pillar of the Community
Bonedigger's Avatar
United States
1267 Posts
 Posted 11/29/2007  2:35 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add Bonedigger to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
One thing I quickly learned when purchasing coins on the internet was to look at the background material the coin is placed on (if applicable) when the picture is taken. Usually it's plain bond paper which should be pure white, but as many of us have realized the end result (the pic) often isn't the case. Various tones of Grays, Light Blues, and Greens all are posted with the coin smack dab in the middle looking better than or worse than the photographer was hoping for.

I've also noticed that many times the camera tends to capture colors and alas, dings which just aren't there when using the naked eye. FWIW, I'm really camera stupid, but am also constantly experimenting with my old trusty Sony Mavica FD-91. It was the standard to be judged against 9 or 10 years ago and ran $900+ with everything included.

As we all know lighting is everything. I've found that when taking pics of worn silver ancients and old US silver, Natural Lighting (I just move the TV Tray close to the window ) is better than say a 100 Watt Incandesent bulb which seems best suited for dark copper issues/ancients and finally Neon which I usually use for MS coins and Gold.

As you know when using natural lighting the time of day and cloudcover is always a factor. But back to the intent of my opening lines. I try to think what a coin would look like when I know what the background color of the material it's laying on is, and many times I've found beautifully toned coins arrive in the mail (usually BHDs) when the seller obviously has tried to 'ahem manipulate' the picture in some way. Sometimes the surprise is the other way around and I might end up returning the coin but rarely do since I'm a Bust Half Dollar variety collector and don't collect just for type coinage. Just something else to think about before you hit the Bid Button or the Buy It Now button. I hope this helps...

Take Care
Ben
Pillar of the Community
hunter20ga's Avatar
United States
1173 Posts
 Posted 12/03/2007  5:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hunter20ga to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I don't have any examples to post, but I've tried photographing the same coin under a number of light conditions and against a number of different color backgrounds. Everyone should try that (especially with digital cameras, where each shot is virtually free) so you can personally see how easy it is to manipulate the appearance of a coin. That's why I almost never trust any picture on ebay unless I can find some reason to think that the coin actually looks "that way."
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