Well, if you don't want to send things out and have 35mm to medium format to 
scan, a good Nikon medium-format film scanner is likely the most efficient way 
to get a number done In semi-automated way. The Nikon SuperCoolscan 9000 ED 
produces excellent scans at 4000 dpi resolution (35mm slides up to five at a 
time, 35mm film strips up to 12 at a time, 4x 645, 3x 6x6, 2x 6x7 or 6x9 per 
load with the different standard film carriers). There are also ANR glass 
carriers for more complex film loads and odd formats, and some folks make 
accessory carriers for them (I have one that lets me load an entire 40 exposure 
roll of Minox 8x11 film, for instance). NikonScan is long out of development, 
but VueScan drives this scanner beautifully and it can make the scanner do 
lovely tricks with a bit of experience and practice. 

The only downside to this route is that these scanners are not cheap (about 
$2000-4000 depending on condition and included accessories), nor are they 
particularly fast (but faster and higher quality than flatbed scanners). The 
good thing is that the VueScan software, particularly in its pro version, 
provides excellent flexibility and will apply the basic inversion for negatives 
for you automatically, which saves a massive amount of time when doing a 
largish number of scans. 

I haven't used mine in a while and should probably put it on the market (it's a 
lot of cash to have tied up in something that you're not using actively, never 
mind being a bulky thing to store). But every time I think to do it, I run into 
a situation where it is the best, if not only, way to get it done and I wonder 
what I'd do if I didn't have it. 

And that's why my closets are so stuffed full the way they are.... !

G

> On May 31, 2016, at 1:20 PM, Malcolm Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> You have answered a question I was about to ask about scanning other
> formats. I've been left, or have taken over the decades, a number of
> different film/slide formats to digitise. Each has their own issues, but the
> bulk are 35mm slides.

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