Secrets of the tru-view photographers?

Man I would love to get one of the tru-view photographers drunk and get their secrets. They produce often produce images that show a combination of luster, color, and detail that I just can't see how they do it in one 2-D image. Anyone know their secrets? Do they combine multiple images somehow?
Philately will get you nowhere....
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No Way Out: Stimulus and Money Printing Are the Only Path Left
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
1. A high-end, professional grade camera, designed for closeups;
2. A place to set the coins, with lighting already in place, a camera pre-configured or with multiple pre-configured settings, and positioned exactly right;
3. Raw coins, professionally graded but not yet in the holder, so no plastic haze, scratches, or fuzz; and,
4. Software already in place to receive uncompressed data to convert directly to a final image, without multi-step generational loss.
By comparison, I have sticking my coins on a flatbed scanner, upping the resolution from 200 dpi to 1200 dpi, and cropping the scan in Photoshop Elements. I think PCGS' studio has me beat.
<< <i>The secret? Phil shoots coins raw, and typically the hardest obstacle for any tricky coin is dealing with the slab. >>
Bingo! Phil is good though, plus the fact that he shoots hundreds of coins a day means that he's had plenty of practice.
His forum id used to be darkhorse and here's the thread where he announced that he accepted the position.
Here's the thread where David Hall put out the call for a photographer.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>The secret? Phil shoots coins raw >>
Yeah didn't think of that....
<< <i>
<< <i>The secret? Phil shoots coins raw >>
Yeah didn't think of that.... >>
It makes a huge difference on certain coins....
<< <i>I would say it's 10% hardware, 10% skill and 80% lighting. >>
I would go 5% camera, 30% lens, 30% lighting, 30% skill. Oh yeah and 5% luck ...
All kidding aside, they are nice photos, but in a few instances, a little to overexposed/cartoonish for my taste.
Practise, practise, practise. when your done practising, then go and practise some more !!!
Hope I spelled that right
<< <i>The secret? Phil shoots coins raw, and typically the hardest obstacle for any tricky coin is dealing with the slab. >>
He wouldn't get the same results shooting jpgs