How to Scan Film Negatives?
Leonardo
Wake up and smell the glaciersEagle River, Alaska Icrontian
This next winter (I apologize for saying that word) I intend to work what will be a massive project. I wish to convert literally thousands of 35mm film negative frames to digital images. How is this done? Excuse my ignorance, but are there scanners available for this outside of the commercial arena? Do they cost a fortune?
Whatever advice about the process, the hardware, and the software you might have would interest me. Thanks in advance.
I've been able to answer some of my own questions by poking around a bit on the Internet. But I'd still enjoy hearing some words of advice from S-M members.
Has anyone used this scanner?
Whatever advice about the process, the hardware, and the software you might have would interest me. Thanks in advance.
I've been able to answer some of my own questions by poking around a bit on the Internet. But I'd still enjoy hearing some words of advice from S-M members.
Has anyone used this scanner?
0
Comments
The software will fix the color balance, you tell it what kind of film it is and how old.
He has scanned a few thousand slides so far.
I'll find out what it is.
I tend to use HP almost exclusively, ease of setup, easy to use ,etc. very reliable.
Just so you know certain scanners have a slot for negatives to be scanned.
Hope this helps. And if your looking for something better-- HP has better ones. I was just trying to give you one that does what you want and not be too expensive.
Features;
Remove dust and scratches and restore faded color from scanned images
Remove red eye and brighten dark areas of your images using HP's adaptive lighting technology
Convert 35 mm slides and negatives into easy-to-store digital files
Organize, edit, share, and save your scans (plus do fun photo projects!) with the included HP Image Zone software
E-mail photos without large file attachments or downloads using the HP Instant Share functionality
Edit scanned text using the included optical character recognition (OCR) software, then save in a variety of file types
Scan 3-D objects such as jewelry and mementos, fitting large or bulky items under the adjustable lid.
Oh my goodness, this will be a real beast of a project should I chose to do it! Even the lowest resolution, no-correction scans are 30 seconds per single negative. I have thousands of film negatives.
I've got a lot of research to do yet, but I'm pretty sure I'll do some conversions over the winter. I just can't be bothered to open boxes, pull out positive prints, or spend hours arranging cute little photo albums. Those days are GONE. A large flat screen monitor is simply superior for viewing.
After experimenting with numerous flatbed scanners with slide/negative capability, I have decided that I'm going to spring for a dedicated machine to do the job. I just couldn't get the results I'm after with the "oh, yeah, it does that, too" flatbed models.
The ones I've looked at cost 2-3 times the ~$200 one you linked to, but when you pro-rate that expense over thousands of negatives it comes to pennies per picture. After I'm done scanning my own negatives, I'm going to try and recoup some of the investment by offering it as a service to others.
She did a couple thousdand photos, scanned, cropped, sorted blah blah blah in about 3 months of off and on work. So it don't get discouraged about the work involved, its totally worth it!