I am making photographic records of all my sets. I just started my ASE Bullions. They are difficult to photograph. Here are three that I would like some feedback on. Are the photos OK?
I think they look nice. The way you have the light on them works nicely. I have lots of trouble getting the light directed in a way which highlights and shadows the coin nicely. Looks like you've got it to me, especially on the obverses. Just my thoughts but I'm not much of a photographer.
You can! Practice makes perfect. A lot of trial and error sometimes but you can get good shots with most cameras with experimentation.
Your pictures look fine to me, just a bit of a shadow along the top of the arms and shoulders. Maybe if you turned the coin a tiny bit counter clockwise to get past the high relief of the device, you may get nice illumination for the whole surface.
A bonus to photographing uncirculated, burnished, or bullion ASE's is no reflection of the camera on the fields.
Getting the lighting correct is the hardest part, too much direct light you wash out the coin with glare, too little, the coin is dark and hides the finer details. I usr the white ceiling of my room to reflect the light back down on the coin from above. This reduces the 'hot spots' you can get from a direct light bouncing off the surface. I went into some detail about this in my ASE postings on how I manages to reduce almost all glare. Like this:
Taking some of the comments to heart I have attached 3 more that I did some light variations on. These three have a little toning on them which adds to the difficulty. Thanks for all the help.
It's probably my 73 year old eyes that it was hard for me to see the year on the third coin of your first series. Other than that, your pictures a great. I was wondering how will you store your pictures?
Thanks. That was one of my issues also. I had to change the technique some. The Date is difficult to capture on these. I think I have it now. I crop them and combine them using PhotoScape X. Then Store them in separate files. These will go into "ASE Bullion Set". I back them up as electronic files.
All of you can take the pictures, I'll take those beautiful coins, Okay! Great show Inspector43, thanks.
I keep my coin pictures filed in directories by denomination, type, then the coins. For file names, I use date, mint, type, composition, variety if known, and weather it is a proof or not. for the reverse, I use the same format but add the number 1 to it to tell me it is the reverse. A number 2 and so on if I have close-ups of same coin. Example: Lincoln Cents: 1960 LMC Cu Proof Small Date 1960 LMC Cu Proof Small Date1 Or This for Eisenhower Dollars: 1976-S IKE Silver Proof Type I 1976-S IKE Silver Proof Type I1