These are the major points of my current workflow...

I scan to preserve the highlights, although I don't worry too much about small, bright reflections. I do this by using the "exposure" controls in the scanner software - I've found that all the other adjustments are best left to Photoshop. Using the preview, I adjust each channel's exposure separately to give a reasonably neutral white- point, with that point as close as I can get to 255 (I'll often use 250 because the preview is quite low in resolution). The image will usually look a bit dark at this stage.

Crop any borders off the scan before you start processing, as they'll affect the histogram.

In Photoshop, I place the black and white points at standard values (about 5-10 for black, I'm flexible for white). I also make the black and white points neutral. I do this with a Curves layer, using the histogram as a reference. I have the histogram in the "all channels" view, at the larger size. As you move the mouse over the relevant histogram, you can see the current value at that position: keep adjusting until the lowest/highest values for each channel are in the desired locations (make sure "preview" is checked in the Curves dialog, so the histograms will update as you make adjustments).

That almost completely solved my colour correction difficulties. My scanner setup gives a reddish cast in shadow areas, and I also remember sometimes getting slight green casts in the highlights.

Sometimes this won't quite work, and I need to modify the adjustments by eye, often by sampling areas from the image (usually for the highlights), but film grain can cause problems with the sampling, even with it set to 5x5 averaging. I usually only have to adjust the blue channel this way, especially if I'd used E100SW. This will also be affected by atmospheric conditions (smoke, haze, whatever) on the day I shot, so white doesn't always look white.

I re-open the Curves dialog and add whatever adjustments are necessary to make the picture look nice - usually a simple brightening will do it, but I often need to add a little contrast in certain areas as well. I usually end up squashing the highlights a bit, which also helps to reduce colour casts in grey skies by reducing the contrast. Unfortunately it has the side-effect of reducing the highlight detail, so I sometimes need to be careful.

The best way to make this process as frustrating as possible is to place the slide on a small light box near your computer. You will go mad trying to reproduce the contrast, saturation and shadow detail visible in the slide. But it does make a good reference for your adjustments.

Sometimes I'll also need to depart a bit from the slide itself - one in particular had a bit of a colour cast due to atmospheric conditions, which looked OK on the slide but was pretty horrible on the screen.

Please note that most of my slides have well-defined neutral highlights and shadows. I occasionally scan slides that don't... in some cases that can be frustrating but for other pics a small colour offset doesn't seem to matter.

The time it takes me to do all this varies a bit from slide to slide. I'm generally able to process a dozen 35mm slides in a couple of hours [not including scanning], largely because dICE does most of the hard word for me :) For medium format, I'm using a glass holder and dICE doesn't seem to work very well at the top & bottom edges, so dust-spotting takes a while. Combined with the extra filesize, I'll do maybe 4 in the same length of time. The workflow speed is quite important for me, as I have something like 1,000 slides to scan before I start on the negs. When I started this scanning project I was only able to scan & process four 35mm slides in a day (scan in the afternoon, process in the evening).

- Dave

On May 6, 2006, at 2:51 AM, Markus Maurer wrote:

Hi David
what exactly is different now in your scanning technique?
Since I have to scan a lot .....  I love to learn ;-)
greetings
Markus

AFAIK the newest films were formulated to scan better than the older
ones.  I'm going through my archives at the moment and I'm currently
doing a mix of E100SW, Velvia and Provia 100F films that were shot
about 5 years ago.  At the start I was having all sorts of problems,
particularly in the highlights. Now that I've improved my technique,
I'm finding that they all scan pretty well (I'm still glad that I
didn't shoot much Velvia).

- Dave



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