Message text written by INTERNET:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Which means I would need to buy a film scanner. I have a document scanner that does top quality documents, but I don't think it's optimized for film... I'll have to check my manual carefully. I know I'd be very unhappy with it if it were only mediochre. I can get that from my film processor now! So that's a bit of an outlay that needs amortizing over a long time.
Secondly, I am not prepared for the learning curve on Photoshop! I have paid careful attention to those who have used it for a long time, and in essense they all agree that it is a steep curve, and takes dedicated effort to be facile with it... I think that "ColorIt!" or "GraphicConverter" would do as well, if I took the time to acquire that skill with them.< you don't need a hugely expensive film scanner. however, only Photoshop and a couple of other applications do color management well enough so that you get consistent results when you tweak an image by looking at it on the screen and then just printing. at the PhotoPlus Expo, any vendor who was not selling their own brand of printers and doing digital output was using an Epson printer to print their demos. Herb....

