Re: Scanning and Dust Spots
Peter said:
I am just about being fed up with removing dust spots manually with PS for my scanned negatives. Could the digital darkroom gurus help me? I am using Dimage Scan Dual IV and its dust brush is next to useless. Short of buying a new scanner with ICE, is there a physical method to remove some of the dust spots on the negatives before scanning?
You didn't say what type of film you're scanning, but note that
none of the ICE-type tools work with conventional black-and-white film!
The reason for that is that these tools use an infrared scan to distinguish between dust and actual details in the image. Chromogenic films (color films and b&w films that go through color-negative processing) form their images with clouds of dyes that are mostly transparent to infrared, while actual dust blocks infrared -- so, it's easy for the scanner to tell them apart.
Traditional b&w film, on the other hand, forms its image from metallic compounds that are almost completely infrared-opaque -- so there's no way for the scanner to tell whether that little black fleck is a dust speck or an important highlight area in your negative.
Having said all that, here's what I do:
-- I process my own b&w film whenever possible. Good labs are pretty careful about cleanliness, but I can be even
more careful when I do it myself.
-- I try to scan the film as soon as possible after it's fully dry... the less time you wait, the less time for it to attract dust, have handling accidents, etc.
-- After loading the film strip into the scanner holder, I hold it at an angle under a desk lamp so the light shines across it. I examine both sides this way for dust, and then blast off any specks I see with canned air.
Even so, I still get some dust specks on my scans. In my experience, the best way to get rid of them is to select them and then run Photoshop's "Dust and Scratches" filter (under the Noise filters.) By adjusting the filter's two sliders, you usually can find a setting that will blot out the dust but preserve the area's grain structure.
Generally you can use the same slider settings for all scans from the same type of film, so I have saved custom actions with the settings I like best for Tri-X, Plus-X, P3200, etc. This lets me exterminate dust pretty quickly by scrolling around the whole scan at actual-pixel size, circling any dust specks with the lasso, then hitting the F-key I've defined for that film's Dust and Scratches settings.
It's still a bit tedious, though, and it still annoys me that dust specks that are gracefully suppressed by my enlarger's diffusion head are enhanced so luridly by my scanner!