You may have automatic color-correct turned on. This doesn't help a lot as you may think.
Try this: 1. Install xsane (sudo apt-get install xsane) 2. Open up xsane (I do it through Gimp and tell it to go to the chooser) 3. Below the Gamma/Brightness/Contrast sliders, you'll have six buttons: Detailed color adjust, negate, auto-adjust, no-adjust, pull from stored, and save to stored. Hit the no-adjust ( Looks like: -> | <- ) 4. Scan in your sample works. Do this on both scanners and compare them. You may find some scanners do this better than others... but if you disable that stuff and use Gimp to adjust the colors, you get better results. On Sun, Dec 6, 2020 at 9:20 AM Travis Sherwood via sane-devel <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello, > > I just found out about the SANE 1.31 update and gave it a try to enable the > Canoscan LIDE 70 scanner sitting on my shelf. Please forgive the lack of > technical knowledge/terminology, but seeing the device finally work in Ubuntu > is quite pleasing. > > For reference, I am running Ubuntu Mate 18.04 (32-bit Bionic) and the > frontend is Simple-Scan 3.28.0, included with the OS. No adjustments were > made to any settings > > I would like to mention that the color appears to be rather washed out. A > black and white scan produced a medium grey result, while colors are > significantly lighter/whiter than the original. For comparison, my other > scanner (Epson Stylus CX6000 all-in-one) has no issue capturing accurate > color. > > Would it be possible to send an example of the same image acquired on both > devices for comparison to facilitate adjustments in the driver/backend/etc ? > > thank you, > Travis Sherwood > -- Kelly "STrRedWolf" Price http://redwolf.ws
