Finalizing My Coin Images Format

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by kanga, Dec 21, 2008.

  1. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    After a lot of testing and asking opinions, I think I've settled on the format for my coin images.
    This is for my coin image inventory and show-and-tell, not necessarily selling images.

    The outer border will match the metal (silver in this case.)
    This image needs a slight bit of tweaking. Some white pixels crept into the background. And maybe some lighting adjustments.
    But the general format is fixed, so criticize only if you have some serious hiccups with it.

    Kudos welcome.

    [​IMG]
     
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  3. Catbert

    Catbert Evil Cat

    Kanga - I don't like the coins "touching" each other in the picture. Otherwise, I like your approach.
     
  4. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    Other than the white pixels around the perimeter (which gives the coin a "ragged" appearance), I like the basic format. Nice job!
     
  5. jaceravone

    jaceravone Member

    Kanga - love the format, but agree with Catbert... don't like the coins touching.
     
  6. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    No touching please.
     
  7. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I'm in the same boat. I like them close, but I like to see a little black between them.
     
  8. Jesh

    Jesh New Member

    They actually aren't touching, it's just because of the editing....

    This is what it should look like...
     

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  9. mralexanderb

    mralexanderb Coin Collector

    That looks SO much better. Nice coin.

    Bruce
     
  10. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I like this suggestion.
    I will incorporate it, especially after seeing the example by Jesh.
     
  11. Catbert

    Catbert Evil Cat

    I would give it even more space between the two views (not a lot more). It is distracting to me to view the edge of the obverse, for example, and see part of the reverse in my focal area.
     
  12. Jesh

    Jesh New Member

    What editing software do you use? I use photoshop. To fix your example I did a wand selection then expanded 2 pixels then feathered 1 pixel and deleted that selection. I did a very fast edit inbetween the coins. If you need any assistance let me know.
     
  13. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I've got Paint Shop Pro 7.

    In general I understand what you did.
    I'm not sure PSP7 can do the sort of editing that you did.
    But I'm a real rookie with this package.
    My bedtime reading is two third-party guides for this application.
    (VERY effective at putting me to sleep.)

    I found one VERY annoying omission in PSP7.
    There doesn't seem to be a circular crop.
    I use Microsoft Photo Editor for that function.
     
  14. andycook

    andycook Supporter**

    Is it me or does the reverse need to be rotated to the right about 2-3 degrees?
     
  15. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I align to the slab so if the coin is rotated within the slab, the image will be rotated.
    The exception occurs when the rotation is too much.
    "Too much" is a subjective judgment.
     
  16. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I orient the camera to the slab, not the coin.
    So if the coin is rotated in the slab, the image will be rotated.
    I override this if the rotation is too much.
    "Too much" is a subjective judgment.

    Oops, sorry for the duplicate post.
    Computer/Internet hiccup.
     
  17. Jim M

    Jim M Ride it like ya stole it

    You might want to take a look at photoscape.org, they have a free software pkg that I have been using that does do round crops, also is a breeze to put coins side by side. I can crop two pictures, place them side by side in less than a minute. Best part is its all drag and drop. I have Photoshop, paintshop etc.. they are great programs and can do far more in the way of editing than this freebie, but for what your doing this is the answer.

    Simple to use too. : ) Thats what I like!

    Cropped, black added, uploaded to photobucket in less than a minute.

    [​IMG]
     
  18. Jesh

    Jesh New Member

    There probably isn't a circular crop, but there has to be a circular selection.

    No image is a 'circle', all images are x by y in dimensions.

    What you would want to do is choose the selection tool, and I'm not sure how PSP7 is layed out, but if you hover or maybe hold down mouse it'll list the other selection methods, and it should show you Circular selection.

    Then I think the shortcut key in both PSP7 and PS to make a perfect circle from the center is shift-alt (this will start from cursor, work it's way out/constrained so you won't get an oval), then invert the selection and delete, that should get you everything outside the coin.

    Remember work with biggest image size possible, then scale down when finished for best results.
     
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