CameraJim's eBay Photography Blog
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Last Day of eBay Contest - Are You in the Running?

Today's the last day in the first period of the guides/reviews/blogs contest. Have you worked on any new material with an eye toward competing and winning?

I posted a couple of new guides on coin photography which might have a shot. If I say so myself, I think they're pretty good, but I may be at a disadvantage due to some of the contest judging criteria, which award extra points for frequency of posting and activity within all three areas.

I don't post many guides and reviews. And, though I have this blog, I mostly use it to support the guides.

So, how about you? Do you think you're in the race?

Help me pick my next ebay guide topic

How about helping me decide what I should write about next?

I just finished writing a couple of ebay guides this week about coin photography and I'd like to start another guide next week. Of course, it's going to be something about photography, but I'm open to suggestions.

Here are a few topics I've thought of...

  • Using Light Tents (you know, like those fabric cube things, for getting softer light)
  • Choosing and Using a Tripod
  • Different Ways to Take Close-up Photos
Those are just off the top of my head. You can either comment on those or suggest some others.

If you'd like to see my other guides, including the new ones on coins, here's the link

CameraJim's eBay Photography Guides


Thanks!

Money - Getting the Picture

Need to take photos of coins? I've completed and posted a new eBay coin photography guide, based on material I've been putting together on my blog. The guide will help you show of your coins in order to make more cash.

Heres the link....

Coin Photography and Lighting

If you find the guide useful, I would appreciate it if you would click the "Yes" button at the bottom of each guide page.

I have also posted an off-ebay version which uses larger photos and is all in one part. You can find that one by accessing camerajim.com and clicking the coin photo on the first page.

Axial Lighting for Coin Photos

Axial Lighting

Axial lighting is a little-known technique which I think has great application in coin photography. In this technique, the light path travels straight back and forth along the same axis as the direction of the camera lens. Primarily used with microscopes or forensic photography, axial lighting can produce shadowless, yet high-contrast images with startling levels of detail.

An Axial Lighting Setup

As shown below, an axial lighting setup requires a flat and clear sheet of glass which is placed at a 45 degree angle to both the light source and the camera lens. Most of the light hitting the glass passes through it, but a significant portion of light is reflected downward at the subject - in this case, a coin.



You will notice that I've used a small black object to shield the coin from any direct light. I've also darkened the room to avoid any stray reflections in the glass. Therefore, the camera lens sees only the light reflected from the surface of the coin.

Here is one coin photo I took using axial lighting, with a black cloth used as the background...



What happens is that any smooth surfaces that are perpendicular to the light path, such as Liberty's cheek or the raised faces of the lettering of the coin, reflects a lot of light back to the lens and thus show up brightly. Any surfaces that are not perpendicular, such as the Liberty's profile or the edges of the lettering, reflect light away from the lens and show up darker. Smooth surfaces, such as the worn areas in Liberty's hair, show up very brightly. Slightly textured areas, such as the background field of the coin, show up darker.

In other words, there are no real shadows here, just brighter and darker areas, dependent on the angle, texture and reflective characteristics of each part of the coin. Note that I controlled the exposure in this photo so that the brightest areas would not wash out entirely. This makes the coin look somewhat darker than you would think from seeing it in person, but the emphasis here is on detail, not shine or luster.

This high degree of detail can be seen even more clearly in this larger version of the above photo...

Larger Axial Lighting Photo

Modified Axial Lighting


You can also control and modify the appearance of a coin with small changes in the angle of the reflective glass, causing the light path to be slightly off-axix, as in this example, where the glass was tilted just a couple of degrees more...



As you can see, even a small shift of the light off the primary lens axis loses some of the available detail, but it also restores the lustrous appearance of the coin.

Shooting a Darker Coin with Axial Lighting

Another advantage of axial lighting is that it can increase the contrast in a dark coin, such as an old copper cent. Such coins, shot with traditional lighting setups can sometimes look like featureless blobs, making it hard to see any significant detail. However, axial lighting and a well-chosen exposure can reveal much more...



In person, this coin is quite dark. To do it justice in an eBay auction, you might want to include both an axial lighting photo and another taken with conventional lighting.

Axial Lighting for Proof Coins


If you'll pardon the pun, the place where axial lighting really shines is with proof coins. The mirror finish of the fields on such coins makes them notoriously difficult to shoot. Any light striking such a mirrored surface at an angle will simply reflect away from the camera, leaving behind what look like featureless black pools surrounding the satin-finish design elements. Here is an inexpensive proof coin, shot with simple side lighting...



And here is the same coin, shot using axial lighting...




Choosing the Right Lighting for Your Coins


As I said when I started this coin photography series, there is no single approach which is best for all coins. In fact, more than one type of lighting can be used effectively  to show different aspects of a single coin. So, I would recommend experimenting with all of these techniques and even to invent variations of your own. The idea is to communicate with people about your coins. For that, a wide lighting vocabulary can be your best tool.
 

Using a Milk Jug Light Tent for Coin Photos

Light Tents

There are all sorts of light tents promoted on eBay for product photography, including expandable fabric cubes, enclosed boxes and even a "coin dome" specifically for coin sellers. Call them what you will, each is nothing more than a way to completely surround an object with a translucent light diffusing material, providing soft light from all sides of an item. Some commercial light tents cost $100 or more. Thankfully, you can make a very good light tent for coin photos for the price of a gallon of milk. And, you get to drink the milk!

The Milk Jug Light Tent

Creating a light tent from a milk jug requires nothing more than a clean, empty milk jug and a sharp knife or scissors. You simply cut off the bottom of the jug to the desired height, place it over your subject, light it evenly and shoot through the neck of the jug. If the neck is too small for your camera lens, you cut that off to make the hole large enough. Here is one of these modified milk jugs in use on my copy stand...



I cut this jug down only slightly, but you could easily make a few milk jug light tents of different heights to match the focusing distances needed for various sizes of coins. For even more light diffusion, you could use a white orange juice jug.

In the photo above, I've shown the milk jug illuminated by only one light, but it is more common to use two lights, with one on either side. This surrounding lighing creates the most even effect. The photo below was shot through the milk jug with one strong light on the left side and a weaker light on the right side..



As you can see, this produces a very soft light which brings out the surface of the coin well. However, a light tent also results in a lower contrast image, with less definition between the brightest and darkest areas. This in turn leads to a loss of fine detail in raised design elements. Small nicks and scratches are also less prominent.

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