Tricks for reading serial numbers on Stocks (grips)

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Whether pencil or stamped I have several pairs of spare stocks that are very hard to read. What works best for each method? Different lighting, photos, ?????

Sometimes the stamped numbers are very crisp but often at least some of the digits are real difficult if not impossible.

Lee - if you see this you seem to have an eye/technique for this.
 
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A good quality camera, the iPhone is one especially the more recent versions, will "see" things we can't. Unfortunately after taking pictures of what I thought were pristine revolvers I'm amazed at what I missed when checking with my eyes in natural light.

Those pencil numbers are very tricky. Best luck I've had is a bright light at an angle while moving the stock panel around and sometimes the lead will shine enough to reveal the numbers. . . . or not.

Jeff
SWCA #1457
 
Those pencil numbers are very tricky. Best luck I've had is a bright light at an angle while moving the stock panel around and sometimes the lead will shine enough to reveal the numbers. . . . or not.

Jeff
SWCA #1457


Direct sunlight will often make pencil numbers 'shine'.

Pics often show numbers you can't see as others said.

Try different forms of light and different angles.

Also- I'm amazed how many people who are collectors don't have any kind of magnifier. Get something! 3X or 5X is what you want.
 
Have had some luck with looking through different colors of plastic film. What I used came from Christmas wrapping paper scraps and some art project stuff from the kids.
 
Good tips above! They work well on boxes, too.
Here is an example where I fiddled around with contrast and other settings. First is pretty much as the naked eye would see it; second is after fiddling with settings. Both done on an i-phone . The number is 101 with a 'J' above it. I have seen several others with the J too, but not too many.

IMG_3115.JPGIMG_3117a.JPG
 
Here are my tips. This is a p38 magazine with a tiny WaA, hard to read:

P38 mag.jpg

Here it is zoomed with an i-phone. I touch the screen where the WaA stamp is to get the focus.

P38 i phone zoom.jpg

Here it is with photo software cropped and zoomed :

P38zoom, enlare and enhance.jpg

For hard to reach and photograph areas, I use my borescope, which is TESLONG attachment to my iPhone. Great for reading lug areas. Bear in mind this WaA is maybe 3/16th of an inch.

P38 WaA endocope.jpg

Comes in handy!
 

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