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<p>[QUOTE="Denis Richard, post: 26599119, member: 112673"]I’m preparing an ANA Money Talks presentation on professional coin photography for the National Money Show in Savannah this February. I hope to see you some or all of you there. </p><p><br /></p><p>My reason for reaching out here is that we all, professional and amateur photographer's alike, face the same challenges photographing coins, the difference is how we handle them. Rather than putting everyone at the presentation asleep covering the usual f-stops, tripods, and keeping the coin level, I’d like to focus on answers you don't find on YouTube. I'll want to discuss the actual problems that challenge collectors and how professionals solved them.</p><p><br /></p><p>What frustrates you the most?</p><p>Coins that never look right no matter what you do.</p><p>Details you can see in hand but can’t capture.</p><p>Photos that look flat, harsh, dull, washed out, or just… off.</p><p><br /></p><p>If you’re willing to share example photos, even better. Seeing real-world attempts—whether they worked or not—is extremely helpful and will directly influence what I cover in the talk. They may even be included in it. This presentation is meant to serve the audience, so I’d like it shaped around what <i>you</i> actually want answers to.</p><p><br /></p><p>Thanks in advance. </p><p><br /></p><p>Denis Richard</p><p>Coin Photography Studio[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Denis Richard, post: 26599119, member: 112673"]I’m preparing an ANA Money Talks presentation on professional coin photography for the National Money Show in Savannah this February. I hope to see you some or all of you there. My reason for reaching out here is that we all, professional and amateur photographer's alike, face the same challenges photographing coins, the difference is how we handle them. Rather than putting everyone at the presentation asleep covering the usual f-stops, tripods, and keeping the coin level, I’d like to focus on answers you don't find on YouTube. I'll want to discuss the actual problems that challenge collectors and how professionals solved them. What frustrates you the most? Coins that never look right no matter what you do. Details you can see in hand but can’t capture. Photos that look flat, harsh, dull, washed out, or just… off. If you’re willing to share example photos, even better. Seeing real-world attempts—whether they worked or not—is extremely helpful and will directly influence what I cover in the talk. They may even be included in it. This presentation is meant to serve the audience, so I’d like it shaped around what [I]you[/I] actually want answers to. Thanks in advance. Denis Richard Coin Photography Studio[/QUOTE]
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