Coin photography question:

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Eric Babula, Mar 18, 2026 at 3:38 PM.

  1. Eric Babula

    Eric Babula Well-Known Member

    I would like to take "good" (loaded word, I know) photos of my coins. Ideally, all coins would be raw, not encased in anything. That would enable me to get the best shots, obviously. Realistically, I have a number of slabbed coins (so I'll have to shoot through the slabs' plastic), about 60 coins in my Dansco 7070 (which I could take out and shoot raw), and about 275 coins in cardboard 2x2s.

    For you coin photographers out there: What would you do with those 275 raw coins in cardboard 2x2s? Do you take all of them out, shoot them, then put them in new 2x2s? Or, do you shoot through the plastic of the 2x2 and be done?
     
    Inspector43 likes this.
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  3. Inspector43

    Inspector43 More than 75 Years Active Collecting

    I take them out o f the 2X2, shoot and put them back.
     
  4. RonSanderson

    RonSanderson Supporter! Supporter

    Agree.

    Unlike a slab, the plastic in a 2x2 is rippled and wavy. It will introduce unmanageable hotspots where your lights catch a ripple and shoot right up into the lens. Plus, 300 2x2’s are pretty inexpensive.

    Get a good stapler that presses the staples flat on both sides. You don’t want your new holders to snag or scratch an adjacent coin when sliding into the box. Look for “flat clinch”, as in this example:
    Amazon Basics Office Heavy Duty Stapler, Flat Clinch, Effortless, 40 Sheet Capacity, 1000 Staples
     
    Last edited: Mar 18, 2026 at 6:50 PM
  5. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    I say, let them free for their photo shoot. Then simply put them back and tape, not staple, them back. :D
     
  6. RonSanderson

    RonSanderson Supporter! Supporter

    Are you concerned about whether the adhesive on the tape might react with the coin? Any reactants in the stickum will be trapped in close quarters with the coin for a long time. I think folks trust staples because they squeeze the plastic lining tight for the width of the staple, and putting one one each side of the coin creates a really good seal against air circulation.

    I don’t have any 2x2’s but I would be concerned about tape. There are probably a lot of collectors who could tell me whether to worry about it or not.

    Or you could go with flips instead. It might be easier.
     
    SensibleSal66 likes this.
  7. Eric Babula

    Eric Babula Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the reply. I kind of figured this was going to be the standard response from most people. Was wondering if people had success shooting thru the cardboard 2x2 plastic.

    Yeah, 2x2's don't cost that much, that's true. I wouldn't want to try to remove staples from and preserve 275 2x2s, and try to put new staples in the same holes. I wouldn't want to see that.

    And, I already do use a flat clinch stapler. That's the only way to go.
     
    RonSanderson and SensibleSal66 like this.
  8. Vess1

    Vess1 CT SP VIP Supporter

    My question would be, is it worth photographing them all? Honestly I have a fantastic set up and can get quality pictures of all I want. That being said, I have only photographed a portion of the collection. For me stuff falls into categories and I don't feel obligated to photograph everything. You have to decide how many image files you want to edit, label and file. 275 front and back becomes 550. That's a lot of time.
     
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