Hi Rick, In the past, I was been engaged to do such projects from time to time, the last time about a decade or so ago. It's very tedious work and takes forever. Since then, I recommend they have the scanning done by ScanCafe.com, who are well set up to do it efficiently. Plus you don't have to accept 100% of the scans either.
The good film scanners that did this kind of work well with automation like that (like the Nikon SuperCoolScan V ED) are all long out of production now, and they were quite expensive when new. Pro-grade equipment to do this work is available from limited suppliers but, again, it's designed for commercial applications and not approachable in price for home use. I scan a few slides and negatives from time to time using a copy-camera approach now, with very good quality results. That's a doable prospect, rather than doing hundreds to thousands of slides. G > On May 1, 2023, at 8:11 AM, Rick Womer <rickpic...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Good day, all, > > I have 20-odd binders of 35mm slides in slide pages, plus some carousels. > > It’s time to digitize these. > > So, I’m looking for a scanner that can automatically feed and scan a stack of > slides. Any recommendations (or warnings)? > > Rick -- %(real_name)s Pentax-Discuss Mail List To unsubscribe send an email to pdml-le...@pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.