eric
[was]: emaquiling
I currently use an older Epson 2450. I cut out my neg carriers so I can get that full frame look. Can any of the Minolta film scanners do that? I need to be able to scan full frame 35mm ... hopefully, automagically mode. Darn scanning takes too long.
vincentbenoit
télémétrique argentique
Answer here:
http://konicaminolta.com/products/consumer/digital_camera/dimage/dimagescan-dual4/02.html
Cheers
Vincent
http://konicaminolta.com/products/consumer/digital_camera/dimage/dimagescan-dual4/02.html
Cheers
Vincent
dkapp
Established
Are you talking about the full frame look as in the entire portion of the strip, holes & all?
If so, I don't see a way. I'm scanning w/ my Dual IV right now & I don't think its limited to the film carrier, but the scan area itself. With a flatbed, the entire surface is a scannable area. With the dedicated film scanners, its designed to just scan the image area.
Dave
If so, I don't see a way. I'm scanning w/ my Dual IV right now & I don't think its limited to the film carrier, but the scan area itself. With a flatbed, the entire surface is a scannable area. With the dedicated film scanners, its designed to just scan the image area.
Dave
eric
[was]: emaquiling
vincentbenoit said:Answer here:
http://konicaminolta.com/products/consumer/digital_camera/dimage/dimagescan-dual4/02.html
Cheers
Vincent
The KM website....sweet..why didn't I think of that?
Hmmm, I wonder if my old Pentium III will work on the DSIV. At least GIMP does...sigh, computers, electronics....pretty soon, I'll need a Cray to power up my Photoshop.
eric
[was]: emaquiling
Not sproket holes, just enough of the negative. Kinda like the way I have my neg holders filed down. But I don't need the roughness.dkapp said:Are you talking about the full frame look as in the entire portion of the strip, holes & all?
Dave
dkapp
Established
Then you will love the Minolta. All the images in my gallery here & my Analog Blog were scanned with it. I use a combination of the bundled software an Silverfast SE software. One usually works better than the other on a given image. Neither are perfect.
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