Hi Frank,
Yes, I have become tired of scanning, and I sold my latest scanner, the not so bad Canoscan 9000F MkII.
being tired of scanning is completely understandable. It is time consuming (= meaning high costs: time is money).
And from a quality point of view it is by far the worst you can do, because the computer monitor as the viewing medium is the worst viewing medium we have (both for film and digital files). The resolution of the monitor is extremely low, and the character of the LCD elements decreases tonality and makes colour rendition worse.
Film photography existed without scanning for more than 100 years
😉. You don't have to scan. Period.
Just use the method, which gives you
- the highest possible quality
- at the lowest costs
= using reversal / positive / slide film. Both in colour and BW.
With reversal film you already have a finished picture in best quality which can be looked at.
Using a very good slide loupe and a daylight lighttable delivers an outstanding, almost 3D like quality for smaller enlargements.
The picture quality is much much better than any scanned film on a computer monitor. With a slide viewed through a slide loupe you get full resolution, sharpness and the best colour quality. No quality loss by scanning and the limits of the monitor.
Professional photographers have worked exactly this way for decades.
And if you want an even more impressive picture quality just project your slides. With a good projetion lens the quality is absolutely outstanding and surpasses by far any digital projector (they have extremely low resolution and bad colour reproduction).
Very good slide loupes, lighttables and projectors are very cheap (even new), and cheaper as a very good scanner. And it is much much cheaper than scans from a professional lab not only in the long run, but even in the mid term.
You also have not only the option for colour slides, but also for BW slides (which are absolutely unique in their tonality and sharpness).
Just use the best professional lab in your neighbourhood:
www.photostudio13.de
They offer lots of different excellent BW films in reversal processing as BW slides:
http://www.photostudio13.de/news/ne...er/11/article/schliessung-olgastrasse-80.html
http://www.photostudio13.de/fileadmin/storage/images/Scala_Informationen15.pdf
With this workflow you have
- a lot of cost savings = more cash for films, or equipment, or photo travels, or models, or photo workshops.....= for all the real fun things in photography
🙂
- the best quality which is obtainable.
It is a win-win-win situation.
Some years ago I was in the same situation as you.
I've come back to reversal film (colour and BW) and printing in my darkroom.
And I've never looked back.
If I need a scan from time to time (seldom), I use a professional lab.
Cheers, Jan