Remote Capture Coin Photography

Anyone taking photos of coins from a camera tethered directly to your PC? I've been thinking about doing this to speed up the process of photographing my collection. Also I can do one coin at a time, work it and save it right where I want it. If I photograph 20 coins, then pull the memory card, then load into the PC I'll surely forget what's what and all that pluging and playing is downright inconvienient.
I was thinking small Canon camera on small tripod and using the macro setting. Alas my SD400 (Ixus 50) won't permit remote capture but my Canon EOS 20D does, although the software is a dog in my estimation. My Nikon D200 will do this under their Capture software as well, but I wanted a small camera dedicated just to being tethered to the camera. The bigger the camera, the bigger the tripod, the more space it all consumes.......you get the picture.
Anyone doing this successfully? And if so...........details........details......
John
I was thinking small Canon camera on small tripod and using the macro setting. Alas my SD400 (Ixus 50) won't permit remote capture but my Canon EOS 20D does, although the software is a dog in my estimation. My Nikon D200 will do this under their Capture software as well, but I wanted a small camera dedicated just to being tethered to the camera. The bigger the camera, the bigger the tripod, the more space it all consumes.......you get the picture.
Anyone doing this successfully? And if so...........details........details......
John
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The software is called "Camera Control Pro" and is $69.95 direct from Nikon. They used to bundle it with their photo processing software, but they quit doing that.
The set-up in the shot below shows the D200 with the Nikon 105mm, f2.8, and the R1 macro flash unit with diffusers. You can adjust all the flash parameters from the PC. They are wireless and you can control each of them separately. I take about half of my coin shots with the flash unit and half with conventional lighting.
Doug
photoman said what I suspected I'm tethered and can photograph about 500+ coins a day. I was no way near that fast when I was using flash cards. Tethered is the way to go. Instant access to your pics on the computer too.
Also I didn't know my D200 wouldn't work without Capture Control Pro. I have Capture 4 but I hadn't tried it yet. I did it a few times with my D70 mostly to load custom curves.
I have a Canon EOS 20D and the Capture software with it doesn't work at all on my Mac. My D70 is for sale and the 20D is right behind it I think. The D200 is a keeper.
John
Never view my other linked pages. They aren't coin related.
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
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I can't even uninstall the Canon Capture software on my mac. Everytime I try to re-install it it tells me it's already there and that's after trashing the program and the preferences files. The Canon software is a DOG. I've been looking at the Breeze Systems software DSLR Remote Pro
but it's a $100 and I'm going to sell my 20D anyway. I'm of the firm belief that a $200 or $300 point and clicky with a good lens and macro setting, properly set up will do a great job tethered. Or great enough for what I want it to do, and not occupy hardly any space on my desk.
John
Never view my other linked pages. They aren't coin related.
Assuming that the microscope itself has satisfactory optics, I would think a simple CCD would be enough and wouldn't require any state of the art camera. I'd like to remote it in through a USB, fireware, or other port and exclusively shoot extreme coin details on a regular basis. Any hardware suggestions? I would be doing this for both raw and slabs, so lighting might become and issue here and there.
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Man...that's some awesome camera set ups guys!
Makes my "Holey Mackeral" look like a Brownie Kodak.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
Photoman-- 500? Really? You are a machine. How does the camera not catch fire? You would think someone who works that quickly would take mediocre pictures, but your pics, to many, are the standard by which many judge their own.
I change all the settings from the PC and see the image before I take the next one.
It's really a powerful program but it takes a bit of time to learn all that it will do.
I can take 300 to 400 images in a day with no problem.
It takes longer to pick the best images, crop and resize than it does to take the images.
There is one thing I don't like.
If I use another program to edit an image I loose the shooting information.
<< <i>21 obsession,
I can't even uninstall the Canon Capture software on my mac. Everytime I try to re-install it it tells me it's already there and that's after trashing the program and the preferences files. The Canon software is a DOG. I've been looking at the Breeze Systems software DSLR Remote Pro
but it's a $100 and I'm going to sell my 20D anyway. I'm of the firm belief that a $200 or $300 point and clicky with a good lens and macro setting, properly set up will do a great job tethered. Or great enough for what I want it to do, and not occupy hardly any space on my desk.
John >>
I ended up having to manually edit the Windows Registry to get that crap off my system, just to attempt a clean reinstall. The reinstall crashed my WinXP box so hard I had to pull the plug, and this is a system I've kept stable since the day Windows XP was released. It was my first crash in 2006.
I've downloaded a trial of the Breeze Systems software (PSRemote for my S2 IS) to have a go, and I'll report back here.
However I didn't know you could control your camera direcly from the PC. I wonder if that software works with my CoolPix 4500? I want to get tethered.
<< <i>I wonder if that software works with my CoolPix 4500? I want to get tethered.
Sorry, you're outta luck.
<< <i>Efficiency is not a part of my imaging procedure. If I imaged coins any quicker, I'd melt my camera with my lights. >>
That's exactly why I try to be as efficient as possible without sacrificing quality. If I really took my time, my camera would probably explode from the heat.
Just a thought.
granpagraf
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Life is too short, I might as well buy Gold while I'm still around!
Unlike many of the posters on this thread, I'm using Canon so I'm interested if anyone has software suggestions for Canon and Windows.
--Jerry
<< <i>
<< <i>I wonder if that software works with my CoolPix 4500? I want to get tethered.
Sorry, you're outta luck. >>
I have a 4500 as well and it won't do remote using the Nikon software.
You can USB the images to your drive and not mess with the memory card.
I have never tried using the Nikon with the Canon software.
It probably wont work but I'll try it and post what happens.
That's a shame. The 4500 is a great little camera.
<< <i>Does'nt anybody use a scanner for photos of coins? I use mine all the time using 400 resolution and My pics come out beautiful.
Just a thought.
granpagraf
I use mine at 2400dpi and adjust to presentable size later all the time. It is not about quality but ease. It's hard to properly capture PL surfaces (my specialty actually too), luster, and toning with a scanner though.
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