cad van lei
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- Messages
- 8
- Name
- dan
- Edit My Images
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good morning,
wondering if any of you is familiar with the Epson Pro V500 (with "ImageScan!" for Linux) and could advise me on the correct way to scan 35mm B&W negatives.
the Epson manual says: Slide one or two film strips all the way into the film holder with the shiny base side facing down..
I've come across a variety of posts - various forums - where a number of people claim that this is not the best way to do it: negatives should be scanned "emulsion face-down", they say (so, if I understand this correctly, that'd be "shiny based side face-up").
Now, i've tried both ways but can't seem to notice any difference in terms of result (other than having to flip the image if i scan the negative "shiny side face-up". On the other hand, the Gimp on my ancient PC cannot handle scans deeper than 1,200dpi...
forgotten to say that i don't scan to get good quality prints, but as sort-of pre-darkroom activity, if this makes any sense at all.
can you please help? Thanks!
wondering if any of you is familiar with the Epson Pro V500 (with "ImageScan!" for Linux) and could advise me on the correct way to scan 35mm B&W negatives.
the Epson manual says: Slide one or two film strips all the way into the film holder with the shiny base side facing down..
I've come across a variety of posts - various forums - where a number of people claim that this is not the best way to do it: negatives should be scanned "emulsion face-down", they say (so, if I understand this correctly, that'd be "shiny based side face-up").
Now, i've tried both ways but can't seem to notice any difference in terms of result (other than having to flip the image if i scan the negative "shiny side face-up". On the other hand, the Gimp on my ancient PC cannot handle scans deeper than 1,200dpi...
forgotten to say that i don't scan to get good quality prints, but as sort-of pre-darkroom activity, if this makes any sense at all.
can you please help? Thanks!