agentlossing
Well-known
I got the scanner I have been hankering after - no one around me shares my level of kid-in-a-candy-store enthusiasm for the ugly, plastic thing. But my initial thoughts are that this is what I've been missing from my film process. I've been going through and rescanning my negatives, and the results are pretty pleasing. Initially the scanning software boggled me (both CyberView and Silverfast) but I think I have got my process down. I'll post some examples soon.
I had considered the Powerfilm scanner as well, which feeds strips of negatives from a hopper. That process looked a little easier, but upon further consideration of this scanner, it appears to be easier to correct framing issues and will also scan a whole uncut roll. My thought is that the best scans I will get will be as soon as the film is dry and clean, so I will be able to quickly scan a low-res "contact sheet" of images or just scan high-res right away. I've been scanning at 5000dpi and it takes a few minutes per scan. 10,000 dpi is the scanner's max but it's not truly capable of getting that level of detail, plus the scans take forever.
I had considered the Powerfilm scanner as well, which feeds strips of negatives from a hopper. That process looked a little easier, but upon further consideration of this scanner, it appears to be easier to correct framing issues and will also scan a whole uncut roll. My thought is that the best scans I will get will be as soon as the film is dry and clean, so I will be able to quickly scan a low-res "contact sheet" of images or just scan high-res right away. I've been scanning at 5000dpi and it takes a few minutes per scan. 10,000 dpi is the scanner's max but it's not truly capable of getting that level of detail, plus the scans take forever.