EliasK
Well-known
Most of us think that scanning is boring and sometimes tricky. But scanners can bring life to images we thought were useless or failures.
Fifteen years ago I used a disposable underwater camera to shoot my wife and our dog (who liked more swimming than walking) at the beach. A little after sunrise, we had a storm while swimming.
The film was developed by a lab which (probably fooled by the unusual uw colors) produced awfully underexposed grainy prints that went immediately to the garbage can. I thought then that this was because of the crappy camera loaded with cheap film.
Fortunately I put the negatives in drawer, and yesterday I discovered them in a cleanup. These came out of the V700:

more embarrassing the fact that possessing some good cameras and lenses, the first time I had 18 "keepers" out of an 24 exp film was from a disposable camera!
Fifteen years ago I used a disposable underwater camera to shoot my wife and our dog (who liked more swimming than walking) at the beach. A little after sunrise, we had a storm while swimming.
The film was developed by a lab which (probably fooled by the unusual uw colors) produced awfully underexposed grainy prints that went immediately to the garbage can. I thought then that this was because of the crappy camera loaded with cheap film.
Fortunately I put the negatives in drawer, and yesterday I discovered them in a cleanup. These came out of the V700:

more embarrassing the fact that possessing some good cameras and lenses, the first time I had 18 "keepers" out of an 24 exp film was from a disposable camera!