Wow. Can someone say "saturation"? Check out this Chameleon auction!

Chameleon Coins Auction
I've never seen photos juiced so much that the slab is speckled different colors...
-Paul
I've never seen photos juiced so much that the slab is speckled different colors...
-Paul
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Comments
<< <i>So that's where all the orange juice went this morning
-Paul
Perhaps the seller, a board member, can explain to us why he needed to juice that photo so much -- should be fun.
<< <i>I'm not sure what the issue is? What's wrong with the coin? What am I missing? >>
The photos are juiced to make the colors look more vivid than they really are. Look at the photo in the auction of the coin in the slab -- the label color is WAAAY off, incidating juicing of the colors using Photoshop.
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
I'm not saying that the coin isn't NT, I'm saying that he saturated the picture to make it look more vibrant than it is. I'm sure it is a nice coin, but the photograph is deceptive.
-Paul
I actually don't think it's that immoral so long as they accept returns without restocking fee. I'm not a photo-juicer seller on eBay nor am I condoning it, but I'm just saying. . .no photograph truly captures what the coin will look like in hand.
<< <i>I'm not sure what the issue is? What's wrong with the coin? What am I missing? >>
I SEE WHY YOU CALL YOURSELF DOH.........
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
FUNNY HOW a person can be guilty of an indiscretion and yet his "posse" will defend him/her 100%
<< <i>I'm very aware of this seller and his picture quality.
I actually don't think it's that immoral so long as they accept returns without restocking fee. I'm not a photo-juicer seller on eBay nor am I condoning it, but I'm just saying. . .no photograph truly captures what the coin will look like in hand. >>
.......oh boy .............. i agree no picture can define the original ; but lets get something straight : the o.p. sez the pix is heavily saturated -that's the issue.
A seller owes it to the customer to not enhance so much as to be intentionally deceptive
<< <i>
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
FUNNY HOW a person can be guilty of an indiscretion and yet his "posse" will defend him/her 100% >>
Also funny how, at times, someone has done no wrong, yet another "posse" will jump in on attacks once kicked off.....
Seen it many times on these boards.....
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
<< <i>I think he is trying to capture the actual look of the toning on the coin which is hard at times to photograph. I see absolutely no problem with this listing. He replied with an indepth credible response to the question in the listing. 100% refund, not sure why there are complaints. >>
may i get in line to suck up to this seller ??
he is a good guy , and he offers a good solid return -
but he is juicing the heck out of the image -and that is wrong
and you oddjob's that don't see the harm in excessive saturation/juicing must have your own demons to chase.......
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
FUNNY HOW a person can be guilty of an indiscretion and yet his "posse" will defend him/her 100% >>
Also funny how, at times, someone has done no wrong, yet another "posse" will jump in on attacks once kicked off.....
Seen it many times on these boards..... >>
i believe it's wrong to defend someone who has erred
<< <i>I SEE WHY YOU CALL YOURSELF DOH......... >>
Jeez, no reason to be a jerk about it. I was asking a legit question. I don't collect toned dollars. I didn't know if the OP thought the coin was fake or whatever else. Remind me to never ask for your help again. Yikes.
any way you look at the holder,
in any light,
you will not see what this photo shows
therefore, the photo does not depict the holder accurately
everyone who has a pcgs slab can look at it in any light they want
and it will not look like the photo of the slab shown
and this indicates the coin will not either
<< <i>So that's where all the orange juice went this morning
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
FUNNY HOW a person can be guilty of an indiscretion and yet his "posse" will defend him/her 100% >>
Also funny how, at times, someone has done no wrong, yet another "posse" will jump in on attacks once kicked off.....
Seen it many times on these boards..... >>
I do not know this seller. Give it up already. You have 5 of the 20 posts. Is there something personal or business wise behind your attacks of this seller?
<< <i>
<< <i>Coin is NT with a 100% refund policy from a seller with great feedback. Look elsewhere. >>
FUNNY HOW a person can be guilty of an indiscretion and yet his "posse" will defend him/her 100% >>
Posse? I don't even have a horse, let alone know who this person. Wow another large inference. Hmmmm.... have we found a button... Press. Press. Press.
Martin
Ebay Aucctions
Chameleon Coins Website
<< <i>I do not juice up all my pictures, but it seemed necessary with this coin to portray what it really looks like. I do my best to accurately represent all my coins in the pictures I use, so that the buyer will get exactly what they expect. >>
Horsecrap. There is no way the coin looks like the one in the photo where the blue slab insert is juiced green.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
History of the US Constitution Coin Set
<< <i>
<< <i> There is no way the coin looks like the one in the photo where the blue slab insert is juiced green. >>
Look at the very last picture. The colors on this coin are awesome (much nicer than the pictures)! Connecticoin, if you really think that the coin looks nothing like the picture why don't you take the Pepsi challenge. If you buy it and you don't think it looks just like the picture, you can return it and I'll give you a full refund (plus refund the S&H) and I'll give you an extra $10 just for playing. What you see is what you'll get. Take me up on my offer, and I'll accept your apology after you receive the coin. I would love to prove one of you non-believers wrong.
would be to take an "unjuiced picture"
and describe the coin in detail
such as when tilted just so, these colors come out or whatever you want to say
when the color is adjusted by software, it looks very suspicious to many buyers
That being said, after viewing the inventory on his web site, there's no way I would ever purchase. Why? Virtually all the coins with any semblance of color have HEAVILY juiced (oversaturated) photos. It's not just THIS coin. This type of methodology across the board raises all sorts of red flags in my mind (whether they are legitimate or not).
If it's a photography skill, equipment, or lighting issue, for your own sake, please either get Mark's book or outsource your photography. You're currently doing yourself a disservice. Granted, I'm overly sensitive to "unnatural" coin photos, but I'm willing to bet that there are other potential buyers that are scared off as well.
I too will periodically use contrast and hue adjustments in Photoshop to make photos look closer to the coin in hand, but nowhere near the garish extent to which those pictures have been boosted. Those just scream out "FAKE!"
It reminds me of a certain "neon" toned morgan collecting site where virtually every picture on the site has been been artificially boosted beyond belief, and the members sit around oohing and aahing the juiced pictures. *bleagh* *shudder*
1/2 Cents
U.S. Revenue Stamps
Boom (a Master Collector) says this:
<< <i>I like and can vouch for the Washington Quarter. The coin was this colorful when I sold it to him. Original toning by ME. ------------------------- Boom's Retired Registry Set >>
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and the board members are trying to help you, IMO,
but you are free to disagree
Martin
<< <i>There is no way the coin looks like the one in the photo where the blue slab insert is juiced green.
Look at the very last picture. The colors on this coin are awesome (much nicer than the pictures)! Connecticoin, if you really think that the coin looks nothing like the picture why don't you take the Pepsi challenge. If you buy it and you don't think it looks just like the picture, you can return it and I'll give you a full refund (plus refund the S&H) and I'll give you an extra $10 just for playing. What you see is what you'll get. Take me up on my offer, and I'll accept your apology after you receive the coin. I would love to prove one of you non-believers wrong. >>
I am NOT talking about the last picture, I am talking about the one with the slab juiced Green. Which photo are we supposed to believe?
Even if the coin looks like the pic in the last photo, it is spotchy and has negative eye appeal IMO, and like the other poster mentioned, I wonder how it got in a gem holder in the first place.
The oversaturation of the photos on your website is bordering on ridiculous. There is no way the actual coin looks like this in hand:
These images misrepresent the coins you are selling. Regardless of whether or not you offer a return privilege, nobodys wants to waste time returning coins. A copy of Mark Goddman's Numismatic Photography book would be a very wise investment for you.
This one:
">1956 Frankie
This coin was hard to image because it's basically flat grey with a rainbow crescent on the lower left half of the Obverse......I would say that his image accurately represent this coin in hand.
This one:
1958-D frankie
In hand I would say the coin is more colorful than his full slab shot......and less colorful then just the images of the coin cropped.....but the coin has amazing color so if you were to purchase this coin...you would not be sending it back becuase it's a knockout. The twin from this original set got a star designation from NGC and this didn't which made no since becuase the coins are nearly identical.
Here is my image of the coin....keep in mind that I had the benifit of having the coin raw so I was able to get ample light on the surface and.......(sorry Martin) but I think I have a lot better technique/camera
I am not siding for or against here...I don't like juicing images for any reason but as a seller....if I couldn't get the images accurate I wouldn't want to leave money on the table either. I once sold a bunch of toners through heritage and their images were so devoid of color that I probably lost like $5000 bucks in sales becuase nobody online could see how nice the coins were.
<< <i>Boom (a Master Collector) says this:
<< <i>I like and can vouch for the Washington Quarter. The coin was this colorful when I sold it to him. Original toning by ME. ------------------------- Boom's Retired Registry Set >>
>>
BOOM claims to have gotten step-by-step directions from MANOFCOINS, an admitted toning doctor, on how to tone Washingtons.
There are multiple post in the thread about it so I won't quote any one in particular. It is however possible that BOOM was flat out lying about it all along.
Over on the BST, BOOM claims that the Washington he sold to Chamelion went from white to multiple color changes as if it were the magical horse in Wizard of Oz, saying:
"For the record, regarding the colors of this Washington Quarter that I say was toned by ME
- this is exactly what transpired.
I introduced someone to the hobby this the past year. Not wanting to see this person get
burned I advised to be very careful - to check for sellers' longevity and feeback %.
I also said to stick with certified coins.
The individual fell for one of these PCGS "look-alikes", designed specifically to fool novices &
that's exactly what it did - fooled this person that is totally new to all this. Feeling badly for
this newbie, I bought the coin, cracked it out and set it aside. At this point the coin was WHITE!
Almost immediately upon cracking this White coin out, setting it aside on a clean Beach Towel
atop a tray on my side-desk, doing absolutely NOTHING to the coin, it began to turn RED! It is
very unique, indeed! In hindsight I now wish I had kept it and submitted it myself because no
matter the circumstances, it made it past grading and is actually very lustrous and quite beautiful.
I have never seen a coin react to AIR the way this gorgeous White coin did, so quickly!
Red turned to Blue & then to Green. Over the span of just a few short weeks, doing nothing
more than simply cracking it out, this piece that was White as any coin I've ever seen, with no
detectable signs of having been tampered with, reacted to AIR, finally settling in as the vivid
colors now seen. I auctioned the piece RAW, described and photographed it to the best of my
ability.
The rest is History! I have been around coins for more years than I care to admit. I've taken
the ANA courses, including Detceting Altered & Counterfeit US Coins and have NO IDEA what
agent the original seller used to make it turn the vivid colors of Green Red, Yellow and Blue.
The buyer, as is the case with all buyers, was extended a Money Back Guarantee. He immediately
fell in Love with the coin, had it graded and it now is exactly as shown. It's a very vivid color combination and made it through grading. As for ME "doing" anything to it other than declared here,
nothing took place.
This IS the History of this coin as I know to be True. It is the colors shown. How it got this way,
I have NO IDEA!"
Link from MOC to BOOM about ATing combined with Chameleon tweaking pics is enough for me to stay far, far away.
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I think the difference for me and some of the other folks that do routinely take coin photographs is that I can look at an image and get a good idea of what it will look like in hand...whether the image is good or bad and I bake that into my bid price. I think what the board is concerned with is potentially a newer collector seeing the images and having the expectation that the coin is going to glow in the dark....which it's not. The good news is that you offer a return policy...but I think getting a new camera is important becuase there will be a lot of experienced customers that see those images and stay away
the camera is not the important part of coin photography
and others have said this as well