Good coin camera

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Laurie B, Feb 1, 2023.

  1. Laurie B

    Laurie B Well-Known Member

    Hey everyone does anyone know what is a good inexpensive coin camera. I want to make sure I can get better pictures and closer details. Thanks and have a great night.
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Google is your friend...try a search for a point and shoot that has a good macro lens and setting. You dont need but 5 megs....cam sometime larger shows to much...as a 10 meg image take correctly can be blown up to fit a wall.

    Some small led lights make for easy lighting... i use book lamps run on 3 aaa batteries.
    And you may want to shop ebay for a used model that you found to of interest.
     
  4. Laurie B

    Laurie B Well-Known Member

    Thanks I am checking out amazon now but that helps a lot. My major problem is the lighting.
     
  5. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    This whole setup cost about 20 dollars. Maybe 30. The lights had shield on them. I took them off. They made reflection i didn't want. The dragon is my prop. Set the camera on it and use the timer. Then a sample image i shot with this setup with a s9+ cell phone camera. 20230201_204610.jpg Screenshot_20221015-173844_Gallery.jpg
     
    dwhiz and Marsden like this.
  6. Laurie B

    Laurie B Well-Known Member

    That looks like a good set up. I saw on google where someone takes a small black pipe and sets up a selfie ring light on top and then works the phone camera in on top of it. Should I try to avoid using the flash on my phone camera?
     
  7. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    Yes I don't use it. Normally the flash reflects off the slab. I don't use it on raw coins either. I just use those 3 lights all the time. The bulbs are CFL daylight bulbs. Those are 75w specifically that I have.
     
    Laurie B likes this.
  8. Marsden

    Marsden Well-Known Member

    75 watt-equivalent, right? I'm one of the rare ones who actually likes CFLs. Not so much a fan of LEDs, though naturally I use a lot of them. Because that's mainly what's available now and henceforth.
     
  9. dwhiz

    dwhiz Collector Supporter

    I use my cell phone, it's a Samsung.
    I took this yesterday using the pro mode.
    I have this white thing I received in the mail.
    I lean it against my coaster, the use PhotoScape (it's free) to crop.
    Oh my now my secret is out:eek: 1924 MS62 Gold Saint 1a-horz.jpg coin image.jpg
     
    Laurie B and Paddy54 like this.
  10. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    Idk I'll have to look. Probably something like that.
     
  11. Laurie B

    Laurie B Well-Known Member

    Thanks everyone for the help and suggestions. I guess it takes time to found out what works for each person. It does not help that I am very impatient:rolleyes:
     
    dwhiz likes this.
  12. samclemens3991

    samclemens3991 Well-Known Member

    Paddy 54, if you come back to this thread, do you have to buy a macro lens, or is that something that comes pre attached to the camera? Also, what are Megs? Is that something like pixels? any info appreciated. James
     
    Laurie B likes this.
  13. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    Some camera have a macro setting. Other camera need a lens. Macro lens aren't cheap. And require some knowledge to operate.
     
  14. samclemens3991

    samclemens3991 Well-Known Member

    thanks for the information. James
     
  15. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    One person's cheap is $20, another's is $1,000...

    There is a very good, but dense, long-running thread across the street (ATS) on serious photography on a $400 budget.

    https://www.coincommunity.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=158182

    There is also a DIY copy stand build for around $300 here: https://petapixel.com/2022/06/11/how-to-build-a-diy-t-rex-stand-for-macro-photography/

    I personally use a copy stand I bought off eBay for $50 - they're hard to find now and cost $150, but it's been years.

    A Canon T3i (2011 camera I bought in 2013). And the Canon (non-IS) 100 macro lens (since I'm using the copy stand, the extra $ for the IS seemed silly). Introduced in 2003 there are a couple newer iterations, but it's still a great lens.
     
  16. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    dwhiz likes this.
  17. samclemens3991

    samclemens3991 Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the information Burton. I know about the photo
    threads but they all seem to turn into a quagmire of acronyms and meaningless numbers (I set my wbl at 4.3")
    or everyone declares there is no way to take a good picture.
     
  18. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    Pretty sure your white balance is measured in Kelvins and your minimal focal distance in inches, but I get the meaning :)

    For the record, degrees Kelvin are the same degrees as Celsius, but the zero points are different (absolute zero vs. freezing point of water).
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page