mark-b
Well-known
Hello to all my colleagues here at RFF 
Is there any kind of software that will remove dust and scratches after you scan the negative?
My Nikon Coolscan IV ED came with Digital ICE, which is great with C-41, and E-6 films. But if I use Digital ICE with B&W negatives and old Kodachrome slides, I get these blobby, muddy scans that are practically useless. I know it has to do with the relatively thick emulson of b&w and Kodachrome.
Thanks in advance for your replies
mark-b
Is there any kind of software that will remove dust and scratches after you scan the negative?
My Nikon Coolscan IV ED came with Digital ICE, which is great with C-41, and E-6 films. But if I use Digital ICE with B&W negatives and old Kodachrome slides, I get these blobby, muddy scans that are practically useless. I know it has to do with the relatively thick emulson of b&w and Kodachrome.
Thanks in advance for your replies
mark-b
Bob Michaels
nobody special
Using the spot healing brush tool while viewing at actual pixels in Photoshop works 99.8% of time for me. It takes less than 30 seconds per scan. Does not degrade the image at all.
But I am one of those who take very good care of my negs, final rinse in distilled water with just a touch of Photoflo, drying in good environments, storing them clean, and all that.
I have never been able to understand those who end up with dust on their negs and then need to deal with it.
But I am one of those who take very good care of my negs, final rinse in distilled water with just a touch of Photoflo, drying in good environments, storing them clean, and all that.
I have never been able to understand those who end up with dust on their negs and then need to deal with it.
sojournerphoto
Veteran
MOst of my negs are like Bo's, but I'm about half way through a scan of an Adox 100 frame now and have been going for an hour... Photoshop healing brush for open areas and clone tool for edges
Mike
Mike
aparat
Established
You may try this Polaroid software. I tried it and didn't like it. The best method is the spot healing brush in Photoshop and some patience.
mark-b
Well-known
i've got a lot of dust specks to deal with and that ps spot healing is like a toothbrush to clean a floor.
do you use distilled water in every step, or is it just the final wash?
will try the polaroid s/w. thanks all.
do you use distilled water in every step, or is it just the final wash?
will try the polaroid s/w. thanks all.
Kevin
Rainbow Bridge
There are variations on how to speed up the process of removing dust and scratches in photoshop. Here's just one of hundreds of online tutorials:
http://creativebits.org/Remove_Dust_and_Scratches
Just to get your feet wet, try this:
Duplicate your image layer and apply the Dust & Scratches filter to the bottom (original) layer. Then puncture through the top layer with the eraser on the dust spots.
This is a little bit faster than using the healing brush because you don't have to constantly take samples with alt-click.
http://creativebits.org/Remove_Dust_and_Scratches
Just to get your feet wet, try this:
Duplicate your image layer and apply the Dust & Scratches filter to the bottom (original) layer. Then puncture through the top layer with the eraser on the dust spots.
This is a little bit faster than using the healing brush because you don't have to constantly take samples with alt-click.
dfoo
Well-known
With CS3/CS4 or lightroom you can use the heal tool (no alt-click required). It doesn't work very well for scratches though.
mh2000
Well-known
there is no perfect way to do it. you have to do it manually. but for large areas of unimportant detail you can select large areas and use the Dust and Scratches filter in PS... for some images it speeds things up dramatically. I live in AZ and suffer lots of dust and static with my negs and none of the standard best practices fixes that... especially for a Coolscan V which accentuates each defect. 
I mainly shoot BW400CN.
I mainly shoot BW400CN.
photogdave
Shops local
I blast my 35mm films with canned air before they go in my ICE-less scanner. Very little dust and the few specs I use the clone tool to remove.
My medium format film, on the other hand, is a major PITA and I recently asked the forum about anti-static techniques:
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=69401
My medium format film, on the other hand, is a major PITA and I recently asked the forum about anti-static techniques:
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=69401
blazejs
Established
Healing brush in Photoshop is the best solution. Unfortunately the slowest. I tried Polaroid software - it's not any faster than healing brush as you have to do a lot by hand to get any good results. Dust & scratches filter is lowering sharpness.
Gray Fox
Well-known
I use canned air angled across the negative carrier, then my old darkroom standby, a Static Master brush. These two with carefully processed and stored negs help a lot.
peterm1
Veteran
I am using Paint Shop Pro photo which has some inbuilt utilities that I now mainly use, but from memory this one from Polaroid works OK. (free too.)
http://www.polaroid.com/service/software/poladsr/poladsr.html
http://www.polaroid.com/service/software/poladsr/poladsr.html
russianRF
Fed 5C User
Photoshop is the gold standard for a software-based solution. I think compressed air would be your best solution. You can also try "Anti-Stat" (available at Freestyle and other places) for cleaning your negatives before you scan them.
If you are using a flatbed scanner, you should also air-can it for dust before scanning. Taming as much dust bunnies as possible BEFORE the scan makes post-processing that much easier. . .
If you are using a flatbed scanner, you should also air-can it for dust before scanning. Taming as much dust bunnies as possible BEFORE the scan makes post-processing that much easier. . .
payasam
a.k.a. Mukul Dube
Bob, come to where I am and we'll see how your negatives stay free of dust.
I'll say that the Polaroid software which aparat names can be good if used well. On full auto it often makes a mess of things.
I'll say that the Polaroid software which aparat names can be good if used well. On full auto it often makes a mess of things.
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