Take great pictures on a low budget.

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by gbroke, Dec 12, 2010.

  1. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Photoscape is an excellent program and it's also freeware...
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    Good to know! Thanks I will look at that also.
     
  4. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    Just an update. I will be making the tutorial video. Just got camtasia installed.
    On another note, although I seem to take some decent pictures, I have come to the realization that I cannot get colors (toning) to show nearly as bright as they are, if at all. Its very frustrating.
    Anyway, the video will be more about working with the picture after you take it.
     
  5. Farstaff

    Farstaff Member

  6. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder

    GIMP for me. cause well I'm gimpy!! It is also Free. I really really like. it feel more intuitive than PS. you can access your tool from what seems like 4 different directions. It remembers 50 or so of your last settings in each tool - 100 undos. preferences seem endless. PS probably has all that too. anyways.


    I tried to tackle reflecting the coins and gave up. So I would love to know how you are doing the reflects. I talk the talk so, you can shorten the path to keep the describing the process simple. I have problems find an easy to use gradient tool, I can flip and rotate easy enough. GIMP must have a 100 different gradients to select from . thats where I get lost.

    I load a lot of my coins into a template. not sure its suitable for reflections... Click on these twice for full resolution.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  7. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder


    Coincidently I shot these tonight


    Axial is the really the only way to consistently get the colors. However Im not sure a Point shoot has the reflex that allows the refraction of light to show the colors. I can't see why it wont work..

    This first pic is axial shot - spot light at 90 degrees to camera and coin with camera shooting through a clear piece of glass at 45 degrees to the coin...

    [​IMG]


    This one is shot with my typical set up with lighting at 10,12 and 2 o'clock position about 10 degrees to the coin.

    [​IMG]
     
  8. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder

    hard to believe that that is the same coin... lighting is everything IMO of course!
     
  9. lucyray

    lucyray Ariel -n- Tango

    Looking forward to the tutorial! Thank you in advance.
     
  10. texmech

    texmech Wanna be coin collector

  11. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    The toning comes out nice in these.

    I will let you guys fight it out on the best way to actually take the picture. I will mention briefly in the video about my setup. I was able to capture toning, but I really had to shoot the coin at an angle. Anyway, the script is done and I will shoot the video tonight. Actually a couple videos, one with some more advanced options like reflection etc.. blah blah...
     
  12. H8_modern

    H8_modern Attracted to small round-ish art

    I have a good camera and decent software but the files on my high-res pics are too large to upload. What are your settings to get such good pics and still be able to upload?
     
  13. coop

    coop Senior Member

    Re-size your images and see what happens. Always promising when you can get images too large. Better than images that are too small.
     
  14. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    This will be addressed in my video. --Resizing and Exporting a web friendly version.
     
  15. coop

    coop Senior Member

  16. coinup

    coinup Junior Member

    how do you do that
     
  17. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    The photo editing software that came with your camera should have an option in it for picture re-sizing. No photo editing software? Download something like photoscape or gimp. It's freeware. I use photoscape and find it an excellent program indeed.

    http://www.photoscape.org/ps/main/index.php

    You could also get an account with photobucket and upload your pics to that site. You can resize your photos there as well.

    http://photobucket.com/

    There is also a image resizer program available from Microsoft (free as well) known as "Powertoys" but I'm not sure if it's compatible with OS's above XP.

    http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/powertoys/xppowertoys.mspx
     
  18. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder

    GOOGLE Microsoft Resize Power Tool - you can right click on any image and select from a drop down the most popluar sizes plus custom.
     
  19. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder

    really does it work well?? YOU BET! I am surprised how many don't know about it. It's FREE
     
  20. EyeEatWheaties

    EyeEatWheaties Cent Hoarder

    seriously.....this is easier than any tool in any program You can do whole batches. I did a 2 gig folder recently.


    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
  21. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Yeah, but I don't think it runs in "Vista" or "7"......
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page