I'm really struggling with my scanning, mainly with Velvia. Although this was for colour film, I assume it would also cover slide film.
Does anyone us vuescan? It looked pretty good in this video, and I moosed it and found lots of positive comments.
I'm wondering if vuescan and colorperfect could solve my Velvie woes.
Thanks for this.
I'm really struggling with my scanning, mainly with Velvia. Although this was for colour film, I assume it would also cover slide film.
Does anyone us vuescan? It looked pretty good in this video, and I moosed it and found lots of positive comments.
I'm wondering if vuescan and colorperfect could solve my Velvie woes.
Hi
I am in the early days of using this software to slowly convert many years of medium format negs and sadly these days I only have access to an Epson 4490 scanner so it's a slow process.
Using Vuescan to make the RAW files and colour perfect to convert, I am using it for both colour and B&W negs and am actually getting very good results.
Mind you scanning 6x6 negs at 4800dpi 48 bit is producing files of around 800mb each and my 2TB Drive is quickly filling up and I am only about 20% through my stack of negatives.
PerfectColor is not an easy bit of software to use but once you get there it works very well.
Paul
@ChrisR C200 is in colourperfect, just look up Fujicolour 200 which is its generic name (and was called for years until Fuji decided to do some re-branding).
Hi
I am in the early days of using this software to slowly convert many years of medium format negs and sadly these days I only have access to an Epson 4490 scanner so it's a slow process.
Mind you scanning 6x6 negs at 4800dpi 48 bit is producing files of around 800mb each and my 2TB Drive is quickly filling up and I am only about 20% through my stack of negatives.
How odd, couldn't see it in mine although I do remember seeing Fujicolour 100!
I have just noticed though that in the film manufacturer drop down, both "Agfa" and "AgfaPhoto" are listed. AgfaPhoto films are all re-branded from other manufacturers films, and there is actually an option for "Vista Plus 200", which as we already well know is just rebranded Fuji C200 so try using that!


Thanks for this.
I'm really struggling with my scanning, mainly with Velvia. Although this was for colour film, I assume it would also cover slide film.
Does anyone us vuescan? It looked pretty good in this video, and I moosed it and found lots of positive comments.
I'm wondering if vuescan and colorperfect could solve my Velvie woes.
I'd reduce your scan resolution, you'll not see much benefit beyond 2400 on this scanner. Your mostly extrapolating at that resolution and even the native 3200 is limited by the optics of the scanner.
Thanks
I thought the optical resolution of this scanner was 4800dpi, that's what it claims on in the instructions, am I missing something
Paul
Well it doesn't end there as there is dpi and dpi as Paul's Cezanne or drum scanner would give better quality results at 2000 dpi than any flatbed scanner also scanning at 2000 dpi.
The Cezanne is a flatbed.![]()
Thanks
I thought the optical resolution of this scanner was 4800dpi, that's what it claims on in the instructions, am I missing something
Paul
Its not so much a "software fiddle" as Brian puts it; simply although the sensor itself can resolve the quoted optical resolution, the optics in the scanning path limit the actual resolved resolution of the scans so you don't gain any greater information after a point and it usually just results in bloated files - scanning test charts the Epson V500 for instance resolves about 1700 dpi and the Epson V700/V750 both about 2400 dpi despite all claiming 6400 dpi; to be honest they are telling the truth so to speak... just at the sensor only and not in actual scanned images.
I suppose it's almost like a "hardware interpolation" (I can't think of a better way to describe it) as the pixels there are directly generated by the sensor without any software manipulation, but theres no additional information actually pulled out of the negative etc.
Interesting though when you read the info on these expensive scanners they say something like max dpi 3200 and not boast of 9800 dpi etc
Also Samuel IIRC we haven't sussed out exactly why an Epson flatbed scanner gives a better result with a larger neg, well I've edited my previous post with a suggestion?
Because the people high end scanners are aimed at are harder to fool than the general public.
At the risk of sounding a tad insulting (which is in no way my intention), isn't it kind of obvious why bigger formats give better results? I'm a bit puzzled by why you ask this!
Well go on then let everyone know by saying why....when you do your own printing it's obvious, but I would wager not many people know how a scanner actually works and would guess if you select a very tiny crop of a 35mm neg and the same size crop on a 120, the scanner would find it easier to work on larger negs and give a better result for that reason alone.
There was a lot of confusion over dpi but recently we have sussed it out (well most of it) and it's:- On the net it has been mentioned (lets assume it's not parroting) that cheap Epson scanners give a true dpi of about 1600dpi and the expensive ones about true 2400 dpi from then above, it's the software fiddle. Well there is some truth in this as the scans from Asda at 1800 dpi with a £20,000 scanner shows the same detail (only detail) as my V750 at any scan dpi. Well it doesn't end there as there is dpi and dpi as Paul's Cezanne or drum scanner would give better quality results at 2000 dpi than any flatbed scanner also scanning at 2000 dpi.
Anyone agree with all above.
Edit above is for 35mm. With larger negs you get better results from all Epson flatbed scanners...so far I can't remember if any one has said "why" ? Well I would suggest one reason is the mechanical mechanism has less problem scanning larger negs.
Thanks for this
I just did a couple of test scans using my 4490 the same 6x6 neg scanned at 1200, 2400 and 4800 dpi and can confirm that the lowest quality was at 1200 and the best at 2400 with 4800 although close to 2400 but not enough to warrant the huge file sizes.
Trouble is I suspect I am going the have to start again with the 20% I have just done at 4800
Paul