![]() ![]() The lab can scan them, then send me by email, but that’s probably more suited to snapshots. Speaking of which, I dropped off my 24 exposure roll of b&w film at the professional darkroom lab today - should get the negatives back in two or three days. ![]() A trial version of the software is free - so it’s easy to try out on any scanner, and decide if it’s worth buying. I don’t want to use it the way the lady who made the video uses it - I just want it to copy whatever I scan (negative, or printed material) without modifying colors, contrast, and so on.įor anyone reading this, if you have a scanner and aren’t satisfied with the software to run it, check out VueScan. I see how the scanner software can adjust color output, but I assume I would just want the standard output, no enhancement, and instead of saving to ‘jpg’ I will save to ‘tiff’ - but again, the program allows me to select all the settings. ![]() What would you recommend for color, and probably more importantly for me, for b&w. Joanna, when you get time, maybe you could go through this, and suggest the best settings to scan images for PL4 ? I’ve found it can “flip” images automatically, and I have full control of all the color settings, etc. ![]()
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