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Replies: 15 / Views: 2,190 |
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Valued Member
United States
380 Posts |
Hey there all... I've been an avid photographer for a while, but have never really gotten into coin photography. Found this in my spare change the other day... and decided to take a photo. Any tips from the experts? I noticed I should have carefully wiped it clean before shooting, those fibers can be nasty... BTW I shoot with a Nikon D80 with 60mm Micro Lens for all of my macro work. Seems to get the job done, but its no Microscope...  
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Moderator
 United States
56855 Posts |
Never clean coins. Use one of those rubber bulbs you squeeze to blow dust off your camera lens. It may just be me or my monitor,but the pic looks a little yellowish. John1 
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Valued Member
 United States
380 Posts |
I suppose it looks a little warm... the wood grain certainly doesn't help any... :/
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New Member
United States
5 Posts |
Is it wrong to remove shadows with photoshop?
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Pillar of the Community
Netherlands
561 Posts |
What also improve the photos is using day light especially when the sun shines you get the best photos.. I always let the sun do the work, play a little around to find the best position for the coin. Then you don't get the yellowish colour..
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1173 Posts |
A couple of points... 1. It's ok to use photoshop or other post processing software to ensure the photo accurately represents the coin. 2. Your camera's software is designed to help you capture images that "look right" by adjusting the response to various light sources. Daylight is different from incandescent light, and both are different from neon lights (and so forth)...you really need to match your camera's firmware settings to the type of light that is available if you want photos that give an accurate rendition of the coin's color. 3. You'll have to do a google search, but there are many sources out there to help you photograph your coins. Copper, silver (circulated), silver (uncirculated/proof), and gold all require different lighting setups to be shown accurately. Reflections, shadows, color cast from backgrounds will all impact the image your camera produces. It's a fascinating subject, and making great photos of your coins is a real joy.
BTW...the German 5-Mark piece I use as my avatar is silver...but in the wrong light it looks quite a lot like gold. I use that avatar to remind myself of all the pitfalls one can encounter in coin photography. LOL Best wishes.
Edited by hunter20ga 03/02/2011 9:39 pm
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Valued Member
 United States
380 Posts |
Here is an update at my attempts to photograph coins...  
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
I like halogen desk lamps (about $8 at Mal-Wart), no flash, for color. You can do just about any legitimate photo manipulation you need with http://www.irfanview.comFree download and incredibly fast.
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Valued Member
273 Posts |
Great first effort! Your camera and lens combo do very well. For tweeking images (adjusting color, tint, contrast, cropping etc.) "Photoshop" has all the bells and whistles. Picasa (free download) has a good built in editor. GIMP is a full featured 'freeware' product (on the level of photoshop), and Windows users can use the 'windows photo gallery" tool for basic "cropping, contrast, color, tint" work. This last one is my favorite, because it is simple. (I do better with simple tools).
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
check out Irfanview, also free. The only photo tool that can simultaneously play a music file.
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Valued Member
United States
451 Posts |
Nice Photo Newbismatic! What kind of camera/ setup do you use?
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Valued Member
 United States
380 Posts |
I'm using a D80 with a 60mm Micro lens. (Nikon's Macro lens)... Along with an SB-900 speed light external flash bouncing off of the ceiling. I'll take a photo of my setup next time I'm taking photos...
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Valued Member
 United States
380 Posts |
Same coin with different lighting setup, let me know which you prefer...  
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Valued Member
United States
260 Posts |
That's MUCH better. You're getting the hang of it. 
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New Member
United States
33 Posts |
Yep that last one is definitely better.
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Valued Member
 United States
380 Posts |
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Replies: 15 / Views: 2,190 |
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