Tech

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by wagszrx, Feb 19, 2005.

  1. wagszrx

    wagszrx Junior Member

    How do you get such good close up pics of a coin? Scanner, Camera, Webcam??
     
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  3. cmbdii

    cmbdii New Member

    I think that they scan their coin, then attack pic to their post. I have 2 scanners, and 2 computers, but you would know that niether of them work with either of the comptuers lol.
     
  4. cdb1950

    cdb1950 Senior Member

    I use a camera, a Minolta DiMage with 10x optical zoom. I also use a GE Reveal lightbulb. Sometimes, I will use an additional magnifying lens (3x and/or 7x) for super close-ups. A tripod is a must with this type of photography. You can get set up for under $400. One of the things I do is set the photo size to the largest available, then use only the center third of the screen for my picture, whether it is the entire coin or the close-up detail. The details tend to get fuzzy outside that area on close-ups. I use the round mask in the software to crop the coin, leaving no background to distract. I start by aligning the west and south edges of the mask with the edge of the coin, then start a new mask from that point and align the other 2 edges. A trackball mouse is almost a must for this because it is so hard to keep a regular mouse on point when you align the the first 2 sides of the mask with the coins edges.

    Hope this all makes sense.... Good luck!
     
  5. Ciscokid

    Ciscokid New Member

    O boy, the answers to this question will be interesting :p
    I however will give you of the best advice, Keep it simple, don't spend alot of money it is not necessary--
    1--I have a digital camera, altho I have bought a much better scanner, I get superb pics with a digital camera--2--DON'T use the camera's flash!!
    3--Get a tripod--
    4--Lighting is the trick--
    5--The camera MUST have the "macro" functions--
    6--Most of the best pictures I have taken I am inches away from the coin--Like trying to get a picture of a beautiful flower if you will--
    7--Take many pictures!! for practice!! With a digital camera it's cheap---Doesn't cost anything ;) -
    8--The best pictures I have ever taken was at night--the sun is down--

    The more you do the better you get--Also there are a few webpages with tips, I believe we had a recent thread on this subject also, don't remember title because I didn't need to read it, I already take great pics--but it took practice--I musta took couple thousand pics before I got really good, also pics between silver and gold little different--The first picture I took with flash when I played it back blinde me LOL--all I saw was a "sun" if u will, flash is a no-no--At least for this amature coin photographer--
     
  6. Steve E

    Steve E New Member

    In the past I used a digital camera. Bad thing was it was an outdated Sony with only 1.8 megapixel and no macro. I achieved very good results with an inexpensive set of close-up lenses that could be screwed into each other to increase magnification.

    After buying my new HP scanner I discovered that I could achieve pretty much the same photo results with it. Just a simple increase in the resolution before scanning and I found that I could zoom right down to the mm. Rpm's showed up very clearly. I scan into Corel Photo Paint where I can crop, resample and pretty much do anything I want to the scan.

    I'm sure that the better mega-pixel cameras will give better results but for those of us that have older dinosaurs, you just have to be inventive.
     
  7. Ed Zak

    Ed Zak New Member

  8. akdrv

    akdrv Junior Member

    I use a Canon S40 4mp camera with a close-up lens and a tripod.

    Here is a sample:

    [​IMG]
     
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