Why do you wanna do slide dupping. Isn't far easier to scan the slides? And
get better resolution as well.
Jens

-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 19. januar 2004 21:26
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Slide duping with the ist D. was:Re: PUG Deadline Approaching



----- Original Message -----
From: "David Mann"
Subject: Re: PUG Deadline Approaching


> William Robb wrote:
>
> > At some point, I will probably make something that I can put on the
> > front of
> > my 6x7 bellows, as that should give enough draw to allow for duping
> > without
> > the close up filter.
>
> Have you set this up for duping both 35mm and 6x7?  The *ist-D would
> make a pretty versatile (not to mention economical) multi format film
> "scanner".

So far, just 35mm slides. I have done a couple of jobs now, averaging about
250 slides per job.
Total time to "scan" the slides was around an hour and a half per job.
I then set up an action in Photoshop to correct the levels, add sharpening,
etc, and let the computer do whatever it is that they do.
Checked, and had about a dozen images that I wanted to do manually, so I
went back to the original files and tweaked them, then burned the whole mess
to a CD.
Total time for the job was less than 2 1/2 hours to scan and burn to CD
about 250 slides.

This is only a 2000x3000 pixel "scan", and I don't think will be quite as
sharp as scanning with a dedicated slide scanner, especially as I had to use
a dreaded close-up filter in the light path, but my customer was quite
pleased, and the results print very nicely.

William Robb

Reply via email to