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Scanning Slides
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Scanning Slides |
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#1 |
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Two Questions:
1. What can I use to clean 35 year-old slides to take the dust off and to minimize the amount of work done by my scanner (Epson 4870)? 2. What is the best resolution to use? My intention is to show the slides on my computer and also using a digital slide projector. I currently use the following settings: Film Positive File 48 bit color Best scanning quality 2400 dpi resolution Unsharp mask - Medium Grain reduction - Medium Dust removal - High I don't use Digital Ice because all my slides a Kodachrome and the documentation says that DI won't work with this scanner. In addition, I have Vuescan but don't use it. Should I? -- Glenn T. Dulmage 207 Valley Road Chestertown MD 21620 gdulmage@verizon.net |
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#2 |
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Q1 What can I use to clean 35 year-old slides to take the
dust off and to minimize the amount of work done by my scanner (Epson 4870)? A1: First, blow off as much as possible with a gentle application of "Canned Air," Dust Off." or a similar product. Second: If that's not sufficient, try PEC-12 cleaner. Most photo stores will have it. Q2: What is the best resolution to use? My intention is to show the slides on my computer and also using a digital slide projector. I currently use the following settings: Film Positive File 48 bit color Best scanning quality 2400 dpi resolution Unsharp mask - Medium Grain reduction - Medium Dust removal - High I don't use Digital Ice because all my slides a Kodachrome and the documentation says that DI won't work with this scanner. A2: Sounds reasonable. I don't see any areas that need changing, except that using "48 bit color" is probably over-kill for your intended usage. Q3: In addition, I have Vuescan but don't use it. Should I? A3: IMHO: The SilverFast and Epson Scan programs provided with the Epson 4870 are both adequate. If you got the Perfection 4870 PRO package that includes SilverFast AI, it's quite possibly the best option. |
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#3 |
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GlennT Dulmage wrote:
> Two Questions: > > 1. What can I use to clean 35 year-old slides to take the dust off and > to minimize the amount of work done by my scanner (Epson 4870)? > > 2. What is the best resolution to use? My intention is to show the > slides on my computer and also using a digital slide projector. I currently > use the following settings: > > Film > Positive File > 48 bit color > Best scanning quality > 2400 dpi resolution > Unsharp mask - Medium > Grain reduction - Medium > Dust removal - High > > I don't use Digital Ice because all my slides a Kodachrome and the > documentation says that DI won't work with this scanner. In addition, I > have Vuescan but don't use it. Should I? > > -- Polaroid have a free download available of a dust and scratch removal software. There is little documentation, and the settings might take a few guesses to get a good combination at first usage. However, it really does a great job on older images, and is much faster than using the cloning tool. It will work best within PhotoShop, where you could set a Batch Action to clean many images in one step. You can find it under the Scanner Listings at: <http://www.polaroid.com/service/software/> Dust And Scratch Removal Utility Ciao! Gordon Moat A G Studio <http://www.allgstudio.com/gallery.html> Updated! |
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#4 |
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"GlennT Dulmage" <gdulmage@verizon.net> wrote in message news:hSp_c.1567$PK3.1123@trnddc08... > Two Questions: snip.................................................. > Dust removal - High > > I don't use Digital Ice because all my slides a Kodachrome and the > documentation says that DI won't work with this scanner. In addition, I > have Vuescan but don't use it. Should I? I have a Minolta ER 5400 scanner. The information I read also said that DI would not work on my scanner. I tried DI when I made my first scan of my Kodachrome (50 years old) slides. The results were excellent. Very little or no touch up required on completed scans. Try it. If it doesn't work then nothing is lost. It sure saves a lot of touch up time. > > -- > Glenn T. Dulmage > 207 Valley Road > Chestertown MD 21620 > gdulmage@verizon.net > > |
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#5 |
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48 bit scanning should not be used unless you can give specific reasons you
to need to scan a range of colors that is beyond what your monitor, projector and printer can produce and don't mind that various drivers will truncate the color range arbitrarily anyway. Stick with the Epson/Silverfast software: it is better than Vuescan. You can try the Polaroid plug-in but it does not really work all that well. Use compressed air, antistatic brushes and cotton film gloves when you handle your slides. If you want high quality you will have to learn to retouch in Photoshop or whatever program you use. This can be time consuming and tedious but is not all that difficult. |
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#6 |
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On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 22:13:14 -0400, "Matthew Dranchak"
<mdranch@snip.net> wrote: >I have a Minolta ER 5400 scanner. >The information I read also said that DI would not work on my scanner. >I tried DI when I made my first scan of my Kodachrome (50 years old) slides. >The results were excellent. Very little or no touch up required on completed >scans. >Try it. If it doesn't work then nothing is lost. It sure saves a lot of >touch up time. > Hi Glenn, Yes, it does work sometimes but it depends on the density of the image. Kodachromes are naturally dense to start with and so... Anyway, I've found it works about 40% of the time., The rest of the time... Anyway, that's why I've switched to Velvia. ![]() -- Hecate - The Real One Hecate@newsguy.com veni, vidi, reliqui |
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