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Scanning Thousands of Slides
Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want
to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - CJB. |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
CJB wrote:
Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - CJB. So, if by 1000's you mean - say - 3500 your target price to beat/break even is 1700 quids worth of gear. If that's the case, you're "ok". Amazon's new "link" features shows some helpful stuff, starting he http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...lance&n=172282 BugBear |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
CJB wrote: Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - CJB. Your first thing to do is edit the slides, I to have thousands of slides but probably only have hundreds that are really important. In the US a Braun slide scanner, that takes a 100 slide tray, different from Kodak trays BTW. Costs about $1400. A Nikon LS5000 with a slide stacker costs about $1500. An Epson V700 takes 12 slides at a time and costs $550. Each slide will take 2-5 minutes, for scanning including Digital Ice, but not counting cleanup in an editing program, about US $90 (Adobe Photoshop Elements). If you want to scan slides non stop make sure you have 1.5-2gb of RAM in your computer, scanning is a resource hungry proposition. Jessops will probably do in a week what it will take you literally years to do (scanning is immensly boring, even cutting the grass may sound better the father you get into your slides). I would pare the slides down and take them to Jessops and be done with it. Tom |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
On Thu, 06 Jul 2006 11:52:59 +0100, CJB wrote:
Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - CJB. Having recently moved to digital I too have slides to scan (15,000 - since the early 70's) I worked out the costs and bought a Nikon Coolscan 5000 ED and SF210 feeder. The SF210 was used off ebay with a 'modification' to be able to scan plastic mounts without too many problems. I figured the cost of this equipment was a lot cheaper than getting someon else to do it. It will take a LONG time to complete, but I'm starting with the 'need to keep' slides first Clive |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
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#7
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
In rec.photo.equipment.35mm CJB wrote:
: Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want : to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p : per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and : screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning : device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a : PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - : CJB. I just finished scanning a huge number of slides and found that I was adjusting the scan settings for each slide. To make a long story short it was a slow painful process that I never want to repeat! -- ------------------- Keep working millions on welfare depend on you |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
In rec.photo.equipment.35mm tomm42 wrote:
: CJB wrote: : Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want : to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p : per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and : screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning : device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a : PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - : CJB. : Your first thing to do is edit the slides, I to have thousands of : slides but probably only have hundreds that are really important. In : the US a Braun slide scanner, that takes a 100 slide tray, different : from Kodak trays BTW. Costs about $1400. A Nikon LS5000 with a slide : stacker costs about $1500. An Epson V700 takes 12 slides at a time and : costs $550. Each slide will take 2-5 minutes, for scanning including : Digital Ice, but not counting cleanup in an editing program, about US : $90 (Adobe Photoshop Elements). If you want to scan slides non stop : make sure you have 1.5-2gb of RAM in your computer, scanning is a : resource hungry proposition. : Jessops will probably do in a week what it will take you literally : years to do (scanning is immensly boring, even cutting the grass may : sound better the father you get into your slides). : I would pare the slides down and take them to Jessops and be done with : it. I was finding that sitting and watching the grass grow was more interesting then scanning slides! I disagree with starting with the "important" slides first. After those are done there will be little to motivate you to keep scanning the unimportant ones! -- ------------------- Keep working millions on welfare depend on you |
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
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Scanning Thousands of Slides
"no_name" wrote in message . .. wrote: CJB wrote: Currently I have thousands of slides from the 1960/1970s which I want to scan onto CDs. The quote from Jessops - never the cheapest - is 50p per slide - OUCH!! I don't want to have to rig up a projector and screen and take photos one at a time. So is there a slide scanning device - with automated feed - that I can connect to a USB2 port of a PC - for scanning batches of slides say 100 at a time? Many thanks - CJB. as an aside it would be easier to scan the negatives if you still have them? film scanners have been on the market longer so are cheaper. You know, now that you mention it ... they've never given me my negatives back when I took film in to have it processed for slides. I too, have thousands of slides. I have found that it's a waste of time to try to scan them all.....I usually eliminate more than half of them. There is no reason to scan them all, when they will keep in slide form for years and years....Wait until you really need to send them to someone else, and then scan them....Otherwise, you are just wasting hard drive space....Also, as time goes on, the hard drive space becomes cheaper and cheaper. My film scanner won't auto feed them, so I have to load the holder with four slides, and then scan them by hand. But that's just the beginning of what seems to be a long, drawn out process. I almost always want to crop out part of the image, and clean up spots and specks and tissues and pop bottles on the grass and etc, so it's really not something that an auto feeding machine would be able to do. My scanner (a KM 5400 II) has more than enough resolution for the job, but is not a very fast machine when you are talking about thousands of slides. The best way is to get a good light box and a viewer, number all of them, and catalog them, and decide which ones to scan then. Set those aside, and store the rest. |
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