If you are going to do it yourself I would suggest scanning. If you particularly want it photographed I would suggest a Jessops shop, or any other that processes film. BUT do ensure that they will give you the negative, because:
1. Its proof they didn't just scan it and charge you more claiming it to have been photographed.
2. With the negative you can always get more done anywhere.
Hope this helps, to avoid disappointment I would suggest the professional route, thereby having guaranteed success!
2007-02-27 12:02:38
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Scan and print at my lab would be 70 cents for a 4x6, and $3.99 for an 8x10. Don't know why many people seem to think getting a print scanned is a bank-buster. Commercial labs will not copy a professional print, but a snapshot could be copied, no problem.
You can take a picture of it, of course, either film or digital. A film copy is called a copy negative.
2007-02-27 18:41:58
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answer #2
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answered by Ara57 7
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Yes of course but you have to have plenty of light and address the glare issues as well as the perspective. Often if you cannot get a good photo head on you have a photo that is narrow going to wide or vice versa. This is very complex. I used to use a tripod with bright lights that you have to be careful with that can fade a photo. Of course you can scan it but it will appear darker. I used to take pictures and cut them and splice parts and re-take them. I wish I would have had a digital camera then. It is fun to take film format photos of other film format photos. I still do it with a digital camera. Glare is a big problem at times. You often change parameters of a photo by going at an angle but it is still worthwhile.
2007-02-27 21:25:11
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Scan the photograph into your photo-shop program and do it that way. You can hold a photograph up while another photograph is taken of yourself. No skill required, just a lot of good luck and clever focus.
2007-02-27 11:30:15
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes you can, or you can scan it into the computer and edit it before printing onto photo quality paper! Most photography outlets will be able to do this for you but be warned, it doesn't come cheap!
2007-02-27 11:32:46
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answer #5
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answered by willowGSD 6
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you will lose a little quality each time. don't know what kind of photograph you have because my experience is in 35 mm photography. you might want to take the photograph to a professional and talk with them about various options and techniques.
2007-02-27 11:27:50
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answer #6
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answered by Marvin R 7
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Yes to all questions. Any shop offering photo services can copy cheaply & easily.
2007-02-27 11:26:05
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answer #7
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answered by jet-set 7
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If you do photograph a photograph, make sure you have the makro function switched on. It will make it look a lot clearer.
2007-02-27 11:24:39
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answer #8
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answered by Rich T 6
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you could always scan it in, or colour photocopy it? or stick it against a well lit, white wall, turn picture mode or macro onto your camera, and dont use flash, or it will show up on the shiny surface of your pic!
x
2007-02-27 11:27:01
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answer #9
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answered by bluebird 2
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Best bet is a high quality scan
2007-02-27 16:21:09
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answer #10
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answered by oioiblockhead 1
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