How to store uncut roll negative?

Nachkebia

Well-known
Local time
8:09 AM
Joined
Jun 26, 2006
Messages
1,993
Hello boiz en girlz, I just bought roll scanner accessorie for Coolscan 5000 so I can scan whole roll of negative without cutting it, but I was wondering what is the best way to store it? put back in the film roll cover? will it scratch? are there any other solutions?
Thanks!
 
My father had his uncut film in the film containers. No scratches after some 40 years :)
 
Okeeey, and I am sure there is no way I can find it at local stores! so what should I do until I buys those fancy bulk loading roll`s :)
 
Storing film rolled (especially in tight film canisters) will eventually result in flatness problems with scanning and printing. Maybe settle for a compromise: scan through freshly processed roll, then cut and store properly?
 
ManGo : I have to develope and scan around 60 rolls of film :) :) :)
varjag : I might do that indeed, there will be no problem with enlarger for the future if I cut them to four peaces right?
 
Nachkebia, I think the issue is not a stip length per se but rather keeping the negs flat in storage. If you find a suitable 1.65m long negative sleeve it would work just fine with uncut roll :)
 
Hi,

I also use a scanner that does a complete roll and at first, I also planned not to cut the film. But putting it in the film canisters without fingerprints or scratches is NOT easy! And indeed, even after a couple of days in the canister, it's a hell to get it flat.

Finally, ask yourself the question how often it will occur that you want to scan the complete roll again? I scan the roll at moderate resolution, just enough to order 10x15cm prints or publish on the web (and for digitial storage). Then I cut the film for storage. If I need larger resolution, it's most often about individual images, and then cut film is even more practical than having to feed the complete roll to the scanner for scanning a single image.

Groeten,

Vic
 
Hallo Vladimer and all,
Like Vic says, after the first "library" or reference scan, you would probably then be selective about future hi-res scans, so a 1,6m roll would be a pain in the a%#$ when you only wanted a couple of negs at a time ?
I am still using a huge box of neg sleeves I bought three years ago, but (and the point of this post) it seems to me over the years that the practical and commercial standard is six-frames per strip, not four, so that would be the preferred size to use for any storage I suppose. My K-M neg holders for scanning are certainly all six-frame, as well as all the archival products I have ever seen.

I would guess that the high-street outlets cut in fours, so that the film will go in the same envelope as a 6x4 print.

With the great quality of your pics, looking after the negs and keeping them flat is a very good idea :)
 
Last edited:
I scan my whole rolls using Vuescan with my LS-4000 and roll film adapter at 2000-4000 dpi as best as "raw" as I can (flat scan, no clipping), then save the files as "Master" files (and dual back them up on an external USB-2 HDs). I then cut them into 6 frame strips and put them in Savage Film-Lok pages (Film-lok kicks butt over trying to slide the negs in, BTW). I figure if I'm going to need to go back and re-scan something it will not be the whole roll but just a frame here or there.
 
Back
Top Bottom