if you have a film camera, an SLR, and the proper lens, you can make an interneg, a film copy of the digital print. As one responder said, you will lost detail, sharpness,etc. This is really rather common with old photographs that people want to make copies of. It would be best if you had a copy stand with proper lighting and a Macro Copy lens, or you can simply turn a standard 50mm lens around in your camera if you have an adapter that will do that and copy it with that. But then there might be another way that could be fun if it works - I have not tried it. Get a transparency film that will take ink jet ink, and then go into the menus of your photoprocessing program, whichever one it is, and flip your positive to negative and then print the negative on the transparency film. The transparency film I am talking about is for an overhead projector and you can probably get the proper stuff at an office supply. Again, you would lose detail, but the trying should be fun and educational. The transparency film is not cheap, however.
2016-05-23 13:42:16
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answer #1
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answered by bernice 3
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all dedicated film scanners can scan negs and convert to positive files........my cheap one does
my one has a option to scan positive or negitive, they both come out as positive files
those that have flatbeds will thumb me down but dedicated are the way to go
EDIT: if i miss understood you i offer another answer,,,,,,,,if you want transparencies, shoot on tranny film
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2007-10-18 16:07:01
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answer #2
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answered by Antoni 7
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Your question is, to me, a little unclear. It sounds as though you want to convert negatives into positives (slides). If you're using black and white film you need to contact dr5 Lab (dr5.com). If you're using color film then you should be shooting color reversal - slide - film.
2007-10-18 22:04:23
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answer #3
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answered by EDWIN 7
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