amateriat
We're all light!
Steph, Steph, Steph....
What I think you want is a Minolta DiMage Scan Elite II (2900). You should be albe to find one via the usual suspects (eBay et al) easily enough. Why this scanner? Two words: Digtal ICE. if you shoot a lot of C41 film (which seems to be the case, according to your posts), this would be a no-brainer (I apologize for using this term in a lot of my recent posts around here). I had one, and got a lot of use from it until I suddenly had the bucks to buy a Minolta 5400 (long story...e-mail me privately for the details). Once you have a good film scanner, the only need you have of a lab is to simply run your film through the machine - no prints, not even cutting the film (believe me, these days, the less physical contact a lab has with your film, the better). There will be no excuse for the lab not to turn around your film in reasonable time under these conditions. And, the results of your own scanning and printing should be better than what your lab can deliver; I learned this the first time I had a film scanner (Nikon LS-10) and printer (Epson Stylus Photo 1200) quite a few years back. And that gear is light-years behind what I have now. And what you already have on film will yield greater surprises than you may know.
- Barrett
What I think you want is a Minolta DiMage Scan Elite II (2900). You should be albe to find one via the usual suspects (eBay et al) easily enough. Why this scanner? Two words: Digtal ICE. if you shoot a lot of C41 film (which seems to be the case, according to your posts), this would be a no-brainer (I apologize for using this term in a lot of my recent posts around here). I had one, and got a lot of use from it until I suddenly had the bucks to buy a Minolta 5400 (long story...e-mail me privately for the details). Once you have a good film scanner, the only need you have of a lab is to simply run your film through the machine - no prints, not even cutting the film (believe me, these days, the less physical contact a lab has with your film, the better). There will be no excuse for the lab not to turn around your film in reasonable time under these conditions. And, the results of your own scanning and printing should be better than what your lab can deliver; I learned this the first time I had a film scanner (Nikon LS-10) and printer (Epson Stylus Photo 1200) quite a few years back. And that gear is light-years behind what I have now. And what you already have on film will yield greater surprises than you may know.
- Barrett