zenza
Well-known
If you only shoot 135, you just need to get a Nikon ES-2. No need for fiddling with a copy stand.
My camera scanning experiments continue!
Hey I'm not sure if anyone else mentioned the Lightroom plugin Negative Lab Pro, but if you're venturing into digital camera scanning this plugin is incredibly good at converting dng/raw files from negatives to positives. Their forum is also really active and helpful.
You get 10 conversions in the trial i believe, and if you want to continue to play with it for a while without using up all of your conversions, just don't apply the change at the end. I highly recommend it, though.
The most important thing is keeping the negatives perfectly flat. Someone mentioned the Skier copy-box. I have a friend that also really recommends that piece of kit. I eventually went with the Negative Supply MK1. Pricey but that baby is heavy-duty and keeps the film really flat. Wonderfully built.
This is from the Nikon scanner.
This is from the Olympus Pen-F, 20mp sensor in normal resolution mode.
This is from the Olympus Pen-F using the cameras 'sensor-shift' hi-resolution mode, resized down to the same size as the image from the scanner.
Is there something wrong with the order here? I find the second image supposedly by the Pen-F in normal mode the sharpest.
It looks sharper because the grain looks sharper but the actual detail resolution is less.