> On Apr 7, 2017, at 8:57 AM, mike wilson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> On 07 April 2017 at 16:45 Doug Brewer <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> I've been cleaning out my storage room in the basement, AKA The Camera 
>> and Computer Museum, and have uncovered boxes and boxes of slides, some 
>> of which are passable photos, and have become interested in maybe 
>> scanning some of them. I've looked here and there at digital slide scanners.
>> 
>> So my query, if you haven't figured it out by now, is if any of you have 
>> gone down this path, and whether you have found a decent scanner. I'd 
>> appreciate any guidance.
> 
> My observation of this phenomenon over the past few years leads me to believe,
> from other folks' scribblings, that the best way to do it is to pay someone
> else.

I agree. 

I have been scanning film since the early 1990s and have had quite a few 
scanners, both negative and flatbed, over the years. Since about 2006, I've 
owned and used the Nikon Coolscan IV and Coolscan V extensively. Either of them 
with the automated 35mm feeder can scan a 6 frame strip very effectively in 
batch mode using VueScan. 

But…

The process is *NEVER* fast. A thirty six exposure roll is an hour or two worth 
of work. A thirty six exposure roll of mounted slides is about four times that 
because you can only load them one at a time. Add time if you select 
individually which frames you want to scan, and if you want perfectly scanned, 
usable, balanced JPEGs to pop out of the scanner with no further editing 
required—lots of time. 

It is far more practical if you have several dozens or even hundreds of frames 
to scan is to wrap them up and send them off to someone like 
http://www.scancafe.com … They'll do as good a job as you will 90-98% of the 
time and whatever they charge is a FAR better use of your money and time than 
buying a scanner. 

Buy and use a scanner when you have specific things that you want to do with 
film photography that requires your personal control of the scanning process. 
Buy a scanning service when you want to convert an archive of older film images 
to digital in order that you can see them and share them. 

G
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