bmattock
Veteran
I have a Konica-Minolta Scan Dual IV and an Epson Perfection 4490 PHOTO. I use Vuescan, The GIMP, digiKam, and run Linux.
I had experimented with scanning 35mm film on the Epson, even purchasing the anti-Newton glass sold by Better Scanning (it works, but you have to gaffer's tape it down, it is not heavy enough to press the film flat). Frankly, I had not been that impressed with the resulting scans, and as some had argued - I began to see the logic of their argument that Digital ICE just ain't all that.
However, most of my negatives are fairly recent and in decent shape - my B&W are reasonably pristine, and my color are about as scratch-less as the one-hour lab can produce - which isn't great, but not terrible.
As a result, I've been using my Epson strictly for scanning my medium format efforts. That's generally B&W that I process myself, so no Digital ICE even if I had scratched my negs.
However, I recently opened an old storage container and found a treasure-trove of 35mm negatives from 1979 and 1980. These negatives had not been stored properly and were in bad shape. I scanned a few of them with my Scan Dual IV and was not really looking forward to spending hours cleaning the scratches and scrapes off the resulting scans.
On a lark, I tried some of those negatives on the Epson. I turned Digital ICE up to maximum and chose 'restore colors' and 'sharpen'. I mean, these were snapshots of my time in the military - and any result is better than no result, so I figured I had nothing to lose.
I am not displeased with the results.

I can certainly see where people get the idea that Digital ICE sucks away sharpness, but when the negs are as bad as this one was, it's nothing short of a minor miracle. Now I can scan these negs - I was going to give it up as a bad job.
And yes, using Digital ICE is SLOOOOOOW. Oh well. Can't have everything.
I had experimented with scanning 35mm film on the Epson, even purchasing the anti-Newton glass sold by Better Scanning (it works, but you have to gaffer's tape it down, it is not heavy enough to press the film flat). Frankly, I had not been that impressed with the resulting scans, and as some had argued - I began to see the logic of their argument that Digital ICE just ain't all that.
However, most of my negatives are fairly recent and in decent shape - my B&W are reasonably pristine, and my color are about as scratch-less as the one-hour lab can produce - which isn't great, but not terrible.
As a result, I've been using my Epson strictly for scanning my medium format efforts. That's generally B&W that I process myself, so no Digital ICE even if I had scratched my negs.
However, I recently opened an old storage container and found a treasure-trove of 35mm negatives from 1979 and 1980. These negatives had not been stored properly and were in bad shape. I scanned a few of them with my Scan Dual IV and was not really looking forward to spending hours cleaning the scratches and scrapes off the resulting scans.
On a lark, I tried some of those negatives on the Epson. I turned Digital ICE up to maximum and chose 'restore colors' and 'sharpen'. I mean, these were snapshots of my time in the military - and any result is better than no result, so I figured I had nothing to lose.
I am not displeased with the results.

I can certainly see where people get the idea that Digital ICE sucks away sharpness, but when the negs are as bad as this one was, it's nothing short of a minor miracle. Now I can scan these negs - I was going to give it up as a bad job.
And yes, using Digital ICE is SLOOOOOOW. Oh well. Can't have everything.