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Scanning negatives
On 02/28/2018 02:46 PM, Paul Carmichael wrote:
On 28/02/18 18:39, Alan Browne wrote: On 2018.02.28 07:16, Paul Carmichael wrote: Looking at scanning a few negatives. I'll join the chorus of if it's just a few, then get it done by some local or mail in service.Â* Be sure to get best appropriate quality which would be around 4000 points per inch sampling. Nothing local (nor mail-in) and these photos are nothing special (quality wise). I've seen some examples of stuff done with 2 bits of glass, a good dslr and a flash, so might give that a go. Got nothing to lose. Got a photo from 30 years ago of the wife and kids in a field making daisy chains. Had it blown up into a poster, but it's faded over the years. Thanks for all the advice folks. I'll come back and report in a few days. I've "scanned" old B&W old size negs by putting them on a lightbox and photographing them with a close-up lens. The results were satisfactory. If you were to sandwich the negs between two pieces of glass, put a large white paper a couple feet away and light the paper, it might work. Certainly cheap enough to give it a try. Doing that with color negs would be trickier, as you would have to get rid of the orange mask along with doing the reversal. -- Ken Hart |
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Scanning negatives
In article , Ken Hart
wrote: I've "scanned" old B&W old size negs by putting them on a lightbox and photographing them with a close-up lens. The results were satisfactory. if it was done properly, it would have been more than satisfactory. If you were to sandwich the negs between two pieces of glass, put a large white paper a couple feet away and light the paper, it might work. Certainly cheap enough to give it a try. except for the reflections off the glass. Doing that with color negs would be trickier, as you would have to get rid of the orange mask along with doing the reversal. computers can do that without any effort at all. |
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Scanning negatives
On 03/01/2018 03:39 PM, nospam wrote:
In article , Ken Hart wrote: I've "scanned" old B&W old size negs by putting them on a lightbox and photographing them with a close-up lens. The results were satisfactory. if it was done properly, it would have been more than satisfactory. If you were to sandwich the negs between two pieces of glass, put a large white paper a couple feet away and light the paper, it might work. Certainly cheap enough to give it a try. except for the reflections off the glass. We are lighting from behind. I see now that I didn't make that clear. The procedure would be camera looks at glass/negative sandwich, white paper or posterboard is a couple feet or so behind the glass sandwich, and the lighting is beside (ideally, both sides) the glass sandwich. Ideally, there is no light hitting the camera side of the glass. The confusion is mea culpa. Doing that with color negs would be trickier, as you would have to get rid of the orange mask along with doing the reversal. computers can do that without any effort at all. "Computers" can't do that, software can. There may be a program or a utility within one of the photo-shop type programs that remove the orange mask in one fell-swoop, but I don't have it, nor do I have much need for it. On the very few occasions that I've needed to remove the mask, I just played with the color sliders until the color was right. Ideally, I would have included an 18% grey swatch, then read the grey + mask, and negated the colors to get back to grey. In the darkroom, it would be around 60M+40Y. -- Ken Hart |
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Scanning negatives
In article , Ken Hart
wrote: If you were to sandwich the negs between two pieces of glass, put a large white paper a couple feet away and light the paper, it might work. Certainly cheap enough to give it a try. except for the reflections off the glass. We are lighting from behind. I see now that I didn't make that clear. it's obvious it's lit from behind. except that's not the issue. The procedure would be camera looks at glass/negative sandwich, white paper or posterboard is a couple feet or so behind the glass sandwich, and the lighting is beside (ideally, both sides) the glass sandwich. Ideally, there is no light hitting the camera side of the glass. The confusion is mea culpa. unless you have a dark tube, there will be light hitting the camera side of the glass. it's also not an ideal method, even without any reflections. the fact that you said 'it might work' means you haven't actually done it. slide/negative copiers hold the slide/negative in place with a tube or bellows to block stray light, without glass, and with back illumination. nikon makes a (relatively) inexpensive slide holder that mounts on the front of a macro lens: https://nikonrumors.com/wp-content/u...ES-2-film-digi talizing-adapter-set-for-Nikon-D850-550x413.jpg a common way of illuminating it is to use a wireless flash: http://www.throughthefmount.com/articles-tips-digitise-7.jpg a more elaborate (and more expensive) option is bellows and a slide/negative holder: http://www.destoutz.ch/slides/acc_cu_slide-copy_ps-4_02_alt4.jpg https://2.img-dpreview.com/files/p/T...665/f856c0f1a3 2a48a692f2ce92feeccfa8 Doing that with color negs would be trickier, as you would have to get rid of the orange mask along with doing the reversal. computers can do that without any effort at all. "Computers" can't do that, software can. arguing just to argue. apparently you don't understand that software does nothing without a computer. There may be a program or a utility within one of the photo-shop type programs that remove the orange mask in one fell-swoop, but I don't have it, nor do I have much need for it. then you shouldn't comment on it. On the very few occasions that I've needed to remove the mask, I just played with the color sliders until the color was right. in other words, you don't have the proper tools, plus your method of guessing doesn't work as well as you might think. Ideally, I would have included an 18% grey swatch, then read the grey + mask, and negated the colors to get back to grey. In the darkroom, it would be around 60M+40Y. ideally, one would use the proper tools and not pretend it's the same as and subject to the limitations of an old school darkroom. |
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