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OT- first practice pics with my first digital camera

lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 43,530 ✭✭✭✭✭
Just baby steps, here- I still have a long, long way to go. These are actually the very first digital pictures I have taken with a camera. I may be about to graduate from my old scanner days...after some practice. At least I'm not frightened of the camera anymore. Startin' to get a little confidence. (At least I can turn it on, now, anyway. LOL)

Reimage of my detecting buddy Billy's dug 1819 large cent- looks better than the old scan.

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Some arrowheads found in NC years ago.

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Second pic of arrowheads- with flash.

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Blue "feather edge" plate fragment from the old Hamilton Plantation site. Late 1700's to early 1800's. Most likely 1820's-30's.

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Porcelain doll head found on a late-1800's site in Crescent, GA, which also yielded Steve ("Millenium")'s 1848 large cent and my 1876 Indian cent last month. The 1819 cent above was also found very near this site.

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Indian pottery fragment found recently near the presumed site of the long-lost Spanish mission of Santo Domingo de Asajo, Saint Simons Island, GA. I found a 1658 Spanish coin there in 1998. The mission was established in 1595, destroyed by English slavers in 1661, rebuilt, and finally burned by pirates in 1684. This pottery sherd may date to the mission period or it may be prehistoric- I'm not really sure.

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Old pocket watch movement found by eyesight alone in an embankment along the Darien, GA waterfront, along with a large portion of early pottery fragments (including some "Feather Edge" pieces like the one above). Probably mid-1800's. The embankment is beside the ruins of some old cotton warehouses that were burned by Federal troops in June of 1863 (an event dramatized in the 1989 film "Glory"). This old watch part may date from around the time the warehouses burned.

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Comments

  • DorkGirlDorkGirl Posts: 9,994 ✭✭✭
    It's not OT---lots of coins in those pics!!! I snuck a peek on the testing forum. Scanners are so much easier, it's hard to give them upimage Looks like you've got the hang of the camera already though, very nice!!
    Becky
  • shylockshylock Posts: 4,288 ✭✭✭
    Great first digi pics Lord! (don't use the flash)
  • LM, interesting finds, thanks for sharing. You're gonna love using a digital camera. First trick is to learn how to adjust the white balance for artificial lighting. Your pics look great. But you'll find that in order to catch the luster on some coins, correctly setting the white balance is essential. This is half the battle, IMO.
    Bill
  • Pics look fine to me! Just keep practicing and before long you'll have it mastered!

    Ken
  • Lookin good image Just don't use the flash though....
    -George
    42/92
  • Looks great for first time use, like George said, flash is no good, I like to use lamp light, but not directly.
    Scott Hopkins
    -YN Currently Collecting & Researching Colonial World Coins, Especially Spanish Coins, With a Great Interest in WWII Militaria.

    My Ebay!
  • wam98wam98 Posts: 2,685
    Look better than my first digital images. image
    Wayne
    ******
  • One thing that works well to illuminate small items is a light box. Just make some sort of frame out of anything handy, can be heavy guage wire, rulers, whatever you have about.

    Then affix an opaque (dang no spell checker), covering to all sides but one. Even a white garbabe bag will work - then shine lights toward the box. The opaque material will light up the coins nicely but diffuse the light to eliminate the shine.

    Great first shots, Joe
    Joe
    image
  • cosmicdebriscosmicdebris Posts: 12,332 ✭✭✭
    Great first pics LM.
    Bill

    image

    09/07/2006
  • lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 43,530 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Then affix an opaque (dang no spell checker), covering to all sides but one. >>



    You don't need no steenkin' spell checker, Joe- you got "opaque" right the first time. image

    I guess light diffusion is what those funny upside-down white umbrellas in the portrait studios are all about, huh?

    Bill- thanks. Nice new Conder, there.


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  • mgoodm3mgoodm3 Posts: 17,497 ✭✭✭
    Keep it up. I like to see the things that you dig up.
    coinimaging.com/my photography articles Check out the new macro lens testing section

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