dave lackey
Veteran
This is a curiosity question and it is really a two-part question.
1. For you hobbyists: Why do you scan your film negatives/slides? And, do you print anything, either 4x6, 5x7 or larger?
2. For you professionals: Why do you scan your film negatives/slides? Is it necessary for technical reasons or is it for some other reasons like sharing on the forums?
I find the scanning thing somewhat odd.
Personally, for me, I scan some snapshots to share with the family, knowing that they may last a few minutes or a year or so before they are deleted, lost, forgotten or corrupted by a bad hard drive or whatever. It is doubtful that they will survive very long at all....I keep the negatives and any post-processed originals backed up. Any scans for snapshots are cheaply done and rarely are larger than 1 mb.
Professionally, I am currently doing photographic documentaries in book form. Currently, I am using a DIY publisher on-line and in order to do that, of course, I get scans from Precision Camera and they do a very good job with 26mb scans. It is more costly, but I figure that into the cost of the project just as the cost of film and developing. I do not share any professional work on-line. I keep all of that separate from forums and anyone else not professional connected to my images. All negatives and scans are kept in a secure place.
So, I don't have a scanner and do not plan to buy one any time soon though that may change as I don't know how my market will evolve over the next few years.
Just wondering why people feel the need to scan everything just as I wonder why people spray and pray tens of thousand of digital images when very few are all that is required. Also wonder why the average hobbyist doesn't think about the importance of a hard bound photo album to hand down to family or friends in the future.:angel:
1. For you hobbyists: Why do you scan your film negatives/slides? And, do you print anything, either 4x6, 5x7 or larger?
2. For you professionals: Why do you scan your film negatives/slides? Is it necessary for technical reasons or is it for some other reasons like sharing on the forums?
I find the scanning thing somewhat odd.
Personally, for me, I scan some snapshots to share with the family, knowing that they may last a few minutes or a year or so before they are deleted, lost, forgotten or corrupted by a bad hard drive or whatever. It is doubtful that they will survive very long at all....I keep the negatives and any post-processed originals backed up. Any scans for snapshots are cheaply done and rarely are larger than 1 mb.
Professionally, I am currently doing photographic documentaries in book form. Currently, I am using a DIY publisher on-line and in order to do that, of course, I get scans from Precision Camera and they do a very good job with 26mb scans. It is more costly, but I figure that into the cost of the project just as the cost of film and developing. I do not share any professional work on-line. I keep all of that separate from forums and anyone else not professional connected to my images. All negatives and scans are kept in a secure place.
So, I don't have a scanner and do not plan to buy one any time soon though that may change as I don't know how my market will evolve over the next few years.
Just wondering why people feel the need to scan everything just as I wonder why people spray and pray tens of thousand of digital images when very few are all that is required. Also wonder why the average hobbyist doesn't think about the importance of a hard bound photo album to hand down to family or friends in the future.:angel: