Photography at Coin Shows – Your Experiences?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Denis Richard, Aug 31, 2025.

  1. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    That's convenient. Are your clients there for VSS, looking for images of their varieties, or for their coins in general? Hey, I just found your video on respectable coin photography on the NNP. I know what I'll be watching at lunch.
     
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  3. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    At shows I just do photos of coins. The variety stuff is done afterward, since I need more equipment for that (microscope and printer). Sometimes people drop off variety stuff for me to keep their coins out of the hands of the USPS at least once. Enjoy the video. The technology is old, but the technique is still sound.
     
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  4. tibor

    tibor Supporter! Supporter

    1437-I36a.jpg 1466 I-97.jpg
    As promised these two are examples of John's excellent work!!
     
  5. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    That was an interesting video. Is that the general setup you use at shows? Do you have any issues with the ambient light?
     
  6. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    Sort of. I have a tripod rather than a copy stand for shows, but it's a nice one where I can reverse the mast and have the camera below the legs. Quite stable. Lamps are the same ones as those I used in the video, except with LEDs rather than CFLs. The camera is attached to a focusing rail rather than directly to the tripod.
    Not usually. Once in a while I'm set up under an overhead light that I have to be careful to shade or it'll show up. The color of curtains separating booths can present an issue (FUN uses orange, CSNS yellow), so I just make sure there's not a lot of light shining on them or I cover them with something else. 1100 lumen bulbs a foot away from the subject far overpower most ambient light.
     
  7. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    Very nice. Were they raw or certified? Is this how John provided the images to you or did you add the text and background?
     
  8. tibor

    tibor Supporter! Supporter

    @Denis Richard these two are raw as most of my collection is. I have a few that are in TPG's. I'll post those pics later today.
     
  9. tibor

    tibor Supporter! Supporter

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  10. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    John, I did a show over the weekend here in Canada, and I'd like to know how you handle people bringing you scratched and hazy slabs. Do you politely refuse them or charge more to clean up the mess? I had a dozen vintage slabs cross my table, and even with cleaning and a polish, they were terrible. Do your customers know to fix them before bringing them to you?
     
  11. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    I have a bottle of PlastX with me, a rag, and a dropper bottle with unscented lamp oil. Usually a tiny bit of oil smeared on the slab takes care of scratches. When it doesn't, I get out the PlastX. I haven't charged more for this, but if I'm backed up I'm not going to spend a ton of time polishing them. I do let people know they need to polish their slabs if they're scratched. The thing is, I have no idea if polishing an old "collectible" slab is taboo. I have a feeling that for those who are actually interested in the coin inside the slab, it's not.
     
  12. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    My first coin show in Canada, as an on-site coin photographer, was last weekend. Overall, it went well. Here are a few of the highlights from the weekend.

    I had several ancients cross my table. This Pushkalavati Indo- Greek square coin caught my eye. Struck circa 185-165 BCE.

    Jeton-3_a.jpg

    Jeton-3_b.jpg

    Below is a 1935 Canadian silver dollar. It was one of several I photographed in vintage PCGS cases.

    0323956404691924_a.jpg

    Below, a unique bi-metallic Gallienus medallion from 253-268 CE. Sadly, the outer bronze ring, once bright, has lost much of its colour.

    Gallienus Bi-Metallic_3.jpg


    With the first show under my belt, my next is the Toronto Coin Expo in October.
     
  13. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    I have the plastX, and used it over the weekend, but I'm not familiar with the lamp oil. Is there a specific product you like?
     
  14. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    The collector that brought them in had no problem with my giving them a polish. I just made sure he approved in person, in front of witnesses. Is it wise to make a little form for that, to get a signature?
     
  15. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    I have a bottle of Ultra-Pure Paraffin Lamp Oil. I also use it as valve oil. A quart bottle will probably last you the rest of your life (unless you use it in a lamp).
     
  16. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    I should really check with vintage slab collectors, because I don't know if they'd rather have original scuff marks or a slab where you could see the coin. This would probably only be an issue for highly collectable slabs and not 99.9% of what you'll see.
     
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