Scanners
Photobycate
Registered Users Posts: 127 Major grins
Can anyone recommend a scanner for slides? I have about 300 slides from eight years ago shot in New Zealand that I want to scan and upload to my website. I'm looking in the price range of $200 - $400.
Thanks,
Thanks,
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Now, if I could just get a SCSI to USB Connector!
Sorry to go a bit OT here.
Don
'I was older then, I'm younger than that now' ....
My Blog | Q+ | Moderator, Lightroom Forums | My Amateur Smugmug Stuff | My Blurb book Rust and Whimsy. More Rust , FaceBook .
Another option you might look into is the Epson V-700 or 750. They are both flatbed scanners, but have the ability to scan film. The DMax on these, however, is only 4.0, meaning that you won't get the tonal range (or sharpness for that matter) as you would from a dedicated film scanner. That, and they cost more than the Coolscan V.
Try to avoid crappy scanners from Pacific Imaging and the likes. The experience is frustrating to say the least.
I haven't tried them yet (but am leaning this direction)...outsourcing (especially in the 300ea range you mentioned) would seem to be a good option.
http://www.scanmyphotos.com/slidescanning.html
The price for 300 is in the $0.75 each range (which I have to admit seemed expensive to me initially), but the total cost would be in line with what you'd already "committed" to. And, as another poster indicated, you probably can't find a high-enough quality device for under $500 bucks anyway.
I'm inclined to let someone who has the right equipment, and does it for a living, do the work.
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I believe it was the Epson 4490 or 4990 that was rated extreme high by most of the testing facilities and they stated that the only way to get better was with a drum scanner.....the conclusion of all the reports I read was that the epsons were easier to use than any dedicated film scanner and not only that but you can do multi sizes....as I need to beable to scan from 135 to long 120 (220) and also 620 and 127......so a good flat bed seems the only way to go, unless I send them off to scancafe for around $00.20 each...if it weren't for them going off to India....that is my only hold out on scan cafe..........
The Epson 4990 has been replaced by the V 700 ....................still at 499.99
Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est.
You might want ot look for a used Minolta DiMage Scan Dual III or IV film scanner. I have one that I bought new a few years ago, and it works pretty well. With all of the Konica/Minolta merger and then selling off products, they are no longer produced. There is no Vista driver for them, but VueScan support apperas to exist (I still use XP, so I use their software). I've never used one of the Epson flatbeds, so I can't compare, but when I bought, the Minolta was higher resolution than any then current flatbeds.
http://jziegler.smugmug.com
The old 35mm motion picture film ends many of us used to bulk reload into 35mm cartridges (I think Starlight Labs was one source back in the 70s) that got us prints and slides and which you generally had to use an 82A filter with, has fared, for the most part, the worse in storage and they are tough to scan and resurrect.
Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est.
Thanks,
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Drum scanning is very very expensive...1 - 35mm slide is over $50 here where I live for drum scanning........unless you are needing to literally make billboard size prints from you photos you really might want to consider SCAN CAFE...... yes they do send your slides and negs to India but the reviews on ere have been really good..... (search the forums)
Don
'I was older then, I'm younger than that now' ....
My Blog | Q+ | Moderator, Lightroom Forums | My Amateur Smugmug Stuff | My Blurb book Rust and Whimsy. More Rust , FaceBook .
www.photobycate.com
http://photobycate.wordpress.com/