English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have lots of black and white negatives (showing images taken from a microscope). I want to make digital copies of these images, in the past I have used a digital camera attached to a light box to take photos. However this camera is now broken and when I use our scanner to scan in the images they come out too dark.

I need a scanner which shines light through the negative and takes the image from the top. I'm not to bothered about fancy resolution or anything as I'm not making pictures just storing the images. There seems to be a large range of very confusing choices, so any suggestions of a good cheap model.

2006-11-02 02:33:35 · 3 answers · asked by Ellie 4 in Computers & Internet Hardware Scanners

3 answers

you need a special attachment for your scanner that will alow the light to pass through your negative contact your scanner supplier for where to get one if one is available.

2006-11-03 12:09:33 · answer #1 · answered by species8472 6 · 0 0

I relatively have a pal that has the Epson V500 scanner, it relatively is decrease than $200 and produces some fantastically sturdy unfavourable/slide scans. this is a flat mattress - yet can optically test as much as 6400 dpi. i've got been advised that it could print good 35mm frames to 11x14 without difficulty. It additionally has digital ICE which will cut back airborne dirt and dirt and scratches on your action picture yet you would be wanting a camel hair brush to comb each filmstrip until now loading interior the scanner to get off as plenty airborne dirt and dirt as available. in case you have a lightbox (or something comparable) and a macro lens on your digicam you will possibly in all probability get ideal 'scans' with the help of skill of shooting each physique that way. you would be wanting a tripod and somebody that might assist you yet as quickly as you get a rhythm it will circulate fantastically at once.

2016-11-26 23:34:18 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Here is a site that explains scanning negatives: http://photography.about.com/cs/adamsansel1/ht/Scan_Negs.htm

2006-11-02 02:48:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers