Lighting in coin photos

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Hiddendragon, Nov 23, 2022.

  1. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    One of the best free sites I ever downloaded. It comes with a lot of features, been using it for nearly 3 years now.
     
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  3. Good Cents

    Good Cents Well-Known Member

    Great, Thank you! I will check that out too!
     
  4. Good Cents

    Good Cents Well-Known Member

    Great! Thank you!
     
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  5. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    Perhaps try using those Ikea Jansjo lights? Here are a few set-ups I've tried that I saw over at coincommunity:

    20180619_setup.jpg
    and
    20171217_camera-ccfopt.jpg

    You don't need that adjustable camera "copy stand" thing, but you DO need a way to keep your camera/phone steady when shooting images...
     
  6. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Late last night I was trying to find the white balance on my phone and couldn't find it, but I tried my work phone, which is newer and a better model, and I found the controls there. Keep in mind I did nothing to set this up to make it a great photo and all I did was change the white balance toward "cooler." I think the difference is huge. The second photo shows the kind of luster I'm trying to capture.

    Before and after adjusting white balance:

    20221123_123148.jpg 20221124_011953.jpg
     
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  7. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    A big difference. Also you got to keep in mind that in image one the coin is surrounded by dark color, image two the coin is surrounded by light color. Makes a big difference to your settings requirements because of the amount of light being reflected back up to the camera lens
     
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  8. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    The best lighting is lighting you can control. You need to control location, diffusion, and color temperature. Lamps than be easily lifted, held, posed, and moved are the best. To control diffusion, add a tissue or deli container lid, assuming the bulb is cool enough. You could also use an additional piece of white paper as a reflector for diffuse fill light. To control color temperature, use all the same bulbs and shut out other light. The light coming through your window is the worst for all of these and is especially ineffective at night.
     
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  9. CoinCorgi

    CoinCorgi Tell your dog I said hi!

    LOL @ Captain Obvious. ;)
     
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  10. jessvc

    jessvc Active Member

    DSC00128.JPG I just used a led lamp over a coin and a 50mm lense on a sony zv e10 turned out really good. I was standing back a ways too. suprised me
     
    Last edited: Dec 3, 2022
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  11. jessvc

    jessvc Active Member

    here is a NGC PF68 with a flashlight almost right over it. Im using a LAOWA 100mm macro lense on a canon 7D with a tripod. 52241985960_5cc69b9666_c.jpg 52241495691_53ef37597f_c.jpg
     
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  12. jessvc

    jessvc Active Member

    1931 S buffalo nickel PCGS MS64. LED light and 100mm laowa macro lens 1931s obv.jpg 1931srev.jpg
     
  13. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I know I am a very mediocre photographer, but I ran across these coins and thought I would post the photos I took...first a word of explanation. I was trying to clean some copper coins by dipping (don't remember exactly what I was using...maybe citric acid) and not doing so good. I had a 1943 zinc lying there and gave it a try in the same solution. I was surprised by the results, so I decided to make the set - P, D and S. The lower right is just a nice steelie.
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
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