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Part 6 of 8 · Coin Photography

Image Editing & Post-Processing for Coin Photos

By US Coin Shows · December 5, 2025 · 6 min read

Making Good Photos Great

Even perfectly shot coin photographs benefit from some post-processing. Cropping, white balance correction, exposure adjustment, and background cleanup take raw camera images and transform them into polished, presentation-ready photographs. The goal is enhancement, not alteration — your edited photos should accurately represent the coin while presenting it in the best possible light.

The ethical line in coin photo editing is clear: enhance the presentation, never the coin. Adjusting white balance so colors are accurate is fine. Removing a scratch digitally is fraud. Cropping to center the coin is good practice. Adding artificial luster is deception. As long as your edited photo accurately represents what a buyer would see in person, your editing is ethical.

Essential Edits for Every Coin Photo

Cropping

Crop your image to place the coin centrally with even margins on all sides. For single coins, the coin should fill approximately 70-80% of the frame. For obverse/reverse pairs, maintain consistent sizing and alignment. Square crops work well for social media; 4:3 or 3:2 ratios are better for auction listings and websites.

White Balance Correction

If you shot in RAW format, white balance can be adjusted without quality loss. Look at the background (which should be neutral grey or black) and adjust until it appears truly neutral. If the background looks warm (yellowish) or cool (bluish), adjust the temperature slider until it's neutral. This ensures coin colors are represented accurately — especially important for toned coins.

Exposure and Levels

Adjust brightness so the coin's highlights aren't blown out (pure white areas with no detail) and shadows aren't crushed (pure black areas). The histogram should show data spread across the full range without clipping at either end. Slight exposure increases often help coins "pop" without looking unnatural.

Background Cleanup

Remove dust, lint, and debris from the background area. The clone/heal tool in any photo editor makes this quick work. A clean background focuses attention on the coin and creates a professional appearance. Some photographers create a perfectly clean black background by selecting the coin and replacing everything outside it with solid black.

Software Options

  • Adobe Lightroom ($10/month): The professional standard for photo processing. Excellent batch processing for multiple coins, powerful RAW handling, and non-destructive editing.
  • Adobe Photoshop ($10/month with Lightroom): For advanced editing — background replacement, compositing obverse/reverse images, and detailed retouching.
  • Snapseed (free): Google's mobile editor. Excellent for quick edits on phone photos — white balance, exposure, cropping, and selective adjustments.
  • GIMP (free): Open-source Photoshop alternative with comparable capabilities. Steeper learning curve but no cost.
  • Darktable (free): Open-source Lightroom alternative for RAW processing and batch editing.
  • Apple Photos (free on Mac/iPhone): Built-in editor with surprisingly capable adjustment tools for basic edits.

Advanced Techniques

Focus stacking: For extreme macro photography where depth of field is very shallow, take multiple shots at different focus points and combine them in software (Photoshop, Helicon Focus, or Zerene Stacker). The result is an image where the entire coin surface is sharp — impossible with a single exposure at high magnification.

Obverse/reverse composites: Create a single image showing both sides of the coin. Place obverse and reverse images side by side with consistent sizing, alignment, and background. This is the standard format for auction listings and dealer websites.

Color profiling: For maximum color accuracy (critical for toned coins), use a color checker card to create a camera profile. This corrects for the specific color rendering characteristics of your camera sensor and lighting setup.

The Ethical Line

Always appropriate:

  • White balance correction for accurate colors
  • Exposure/brightness adjustment
  • Cropping and straightening
  • Background cleanup (removing dust, lint)
  • Sharpening to compensate for camera softness

Never appropriate:

  • Removing scratches, contact marks, or damage
  • Enhancing or adding toning colors
  • Adding or improving luster
  • Removing spots, stains, or discoloration from the coin itself
  • Any edit that makes the coin appear better than it is in person

When in doubt, ask yourself: "Would a buyer feel deceived if they saw this coin in person after seeing my photo?" If yes, you've crossed the line. Honest photography builds the trust that sustains long-term collecting relationships — with dealers, fellow collectors, and the broader numismatic community.

This guide is for educational purposes. Where official standards, grading services, organization memberships, or legal requirements apply, consult the primary authority named in the references below or the relevant government agency.

Reviewed on December 10, 2025 by the US Coin Shows editorial team. Editorial policy

Frequently Asked Questions

What edits are appropriate for coin photos?

Appropriate: white balance correction, exposure adjustment, cropping, background cleanup (dust/lint), and sharpening. Never appropriate: removing scratches or damage, enhancing toning colors, adding luster, or any edit that makes the coin look better than it actually is.

What is the best free photo editing software for coins?

Snapseed (Google, free) is excellent for mobile editing. GIMP (free, desktop) provides Photoshop-level capabilities. Darktable (free, desktop) handles RAW processing like Lightroom. Apple Photos (free on Mac/iPhone) handles basic edits well.

What is focus stacking?

A technique for extreme macro photography where multiple shots at different focus points are combined in software to create an image with the entire coin surface in sharp focus. Essential at high magnifications where a single shot can't achieve sufficient depth of field.