Yeah, BIGBOSSMAN talks sense.
Depending on the quality you want to go for, high end scans are going to set you back a pretty penny.
We typically scan films at 5000pixels long edge, RGB 48bit (archive quality) to TIF format.
Yeah, BIGBOSSMAN talks sense.
Depending on the quality you want to go for, high end scans are going to set you back a pretty penny.
We typically scan films at 5000pixels long edge, RGB 48bit (archive quality) to TIF format.
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
I wish I had known of the shoebox service and how cheap it is. I spent a couple of hours each night for the better part of a month scanning and archiving all my parents photo albums.
Very tedious.
vagrant
I would like to put the best of my parents' slides on CDs for their various grandchildren some of whom never knew all their grandparents.
We have hardware at work, but so far I haven't got that enthusiastic about spending a bunch of Saturdays in the office.
The other hardware in that link for converting vinyl to MP3 etc was of interest too.
Maybe when I retire?
Last edited by pritch; 22nd September 2007 at 00:37. Reason: The dreaded misplaced apostrophe!
There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop
1st thing, -ve scanners are slow. So be prepare to spend a few mins on each slide.
2nd, the one on that link you posted are quite low quality. Canon / Epson / Kodak make some better ones.
3rd, they will create a big file on your computer. Make sure it is up to the requirements. Good processor (C2D) / 1Gb+ memory / 2~5Mb space per photo depending on format.
newbie since August 2004....
VTR250 (retired) / SV650S (Fw:Keystone19) / GSXR750(given up) / CB400(traded for 919) / CB900 Hornet / CBR954 (traded) / CBR1100XX (sold) / TuonoR (sold) / CB900 Hornet / NC700X / MTS1200 / XR250
Always with the inside the box!
Opaque sheet of white perspex (or any evenly translucent material) and place a white (flourescent) light under it. Or two - as long as it's even light.
Place the neg flat on it.
Photograph it in macro mode on a decent digital camera.
Open in photoshop - image menu - invert.
Tweak the levels, give it a sharpen.
Job done.
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