Scanning Old Photos for Archive
thnewton
Registered Users Posts: 1 Beginner grinner
Hi Folks -
Is there a product out there -- a scanner or scanner add on -- that allows you to take hundreds of old old photos (different shapes and sizes) and easily scan them to high resolution images. I guess what I'm looking for is a flexible, gentle, document feeder that would allow me to quickly archive my extended family's quickly deteriorating collection of old snapshots.
As for scanners, since I only have room for an all-in-one device, I'm considering the HP Officejet 7130 All-in-One (C8389A) for about $400.
Thanks for any help or advice!
Is there a product out there -- a scanner or scanner add on -- that allows you to take hundreds of old old photos (different shapes and sizes) and easily scan them to high resolution images. I guess what I'm looking for is a flexible, gentle, document feeder that would allow me to quickly archive my extended family's quickly deteriorating collection of old snapshots.
As for scanners, since I only have room for an all-in-one device, I'm considering the HP Officejet 7130 All-in-One (C8389A) for about $400.
Thanks for any help or advice!
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Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
I've done a couple of hundred of my Dads old slides and quite a few prints from family albums, the colours need some work as the slides are 30 years old and the photos are at least that. Its a very time consuming but enjoyable job. If you want to see some, let me know and I'll post few examples. There's some great cars and fantastic haircuts too!
Cheers
Jon
gubbs.smugmug.com
They were all dirt poor farmers but for some odd reason they took a lot of pictures..my grandfather developed them. I still have his gear downstairs.
This was in the early 1930's....the more i look at it the more i see the Waltons
i searched last year for what you are looking for, and found that elbow grease and sticktoitiveness were the only tools out there ....
good luck!
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I just read an article this afternoon about this task - It seems that you CAN GANG SCAN photos with Photoshop CS. Just put several photos on a flat bed scanner - like the Epson 3200 or so, and go to File - Automate - Crop and Straighten Photos. This command in Photoshop CS will let you scan numerous photos at a time without bothiring to align them - PS CS will recognize each photo seperately and rotate them correctly and allow each individual file to be saved seperately. So.... If you own Adobe PhotoShop CS and a good flat bed scanner, you can scan multiple prints at a time.
I am not aware of a consumer type device for automatically scanning stacks of photographs.
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
The HP5000 and the HP5300 have automatic document feeders which allow batch scanning of pictures. I used it for pictures from wallet size to 6 by 4.
It can't handle very small sizes, and I wouldn't trust it with very old or fragile pictures. It wouldn't process any of my old Polaroid pictures.
I scanned 1500 pictures using the HP5300 in November. About 3/4 were done in batch, and the rest were individual scans that the machine wouldn't handle, or I was afraid to try to send through the feeder.
The biggest problem with tis batch processing is that you inevitably get dust on the glass. You need to clean the glass between batches, but inevitably, the pictures deposit dust and particles, and the scans become progressively dirter.
I was very unhappy with this dust, so I bought a Microtek Scanmaker, with digital ICE software, which does automatic photo restoration. It removes scratches, dust, and even repairs if a picture is not too badly torn.
Wow, that's quite a feat. I'm up against something similar with my dad's collection. How did you screen them, were they mostly positives? Is there a quick way to screen negatives? What scanner did you use?
Malte