bcs89
Contented Oly Owner
Hi all,
New here and to RF's in general - actually, other than P&S, new to photography in general - so this may be a "Duh!" kind of question, but please bear with me. Quick background - my only photo experience has been with auto SLR's and one hour developing till just recently when I rediscovered my dads old RF's (yashica gsn & konica s2)... I fell in love. So now with plans of shooting tons and tons of film I started thinking about developing costs and became concerned. So here is my question, at my job I have access to several scanners, the one in on my desk is a Nikon coolscan 5000 ed - since this scanner is designed to be used with 35mm slides would it be possible for me to develop my own 35mm at home and then scan it on the nikon, and then just print any images I want at that point? I know this sounds pretty dense on my part, but it seems too easy - like I am missing a step or two. I realize the answer I am looking for is out there (if not in the archives here) but this idea just hit me and seems too good to be true. Granted I would have to learn some new skills, but am I on the right track? Any input would be gratefully appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Scott
New here and to RF's in general - actually, other than P&S, new to photography in general - so this may be a "Duh!" kind of question, but please bear with me. Quick background - my only photo experience has been with auto SLR's and one hour developing till just recently when I rediscovered my dads old RF's (yashica gsn & konica s2)... I fell in love. So now with plans of shooting tons and tons of film I started thinking about developing costs and became concerned. So here is my question, at my job I have access to several scanners, the one in on my desk is a Nikon coolscan 5000 ed - since this scanner is designed to be used with 35mm slides would it be possible for me to develop my own 35mm at home and then scan it on the nikon, and then just print any images I want at that point? I know this sounds pretty dense on my part, but it seems too easy - like I am missing a step or two. I realize the answer I am looking for is out there (if not in the archives here) but this idea just hit me and seems too good to be true. Granted I would have to learn some new skills, but am I on the right track? Any input would be gratefully appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Scott