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Re: [OM] IMG: Oxford + scanning tips

Subject: Re: [OM] IMG: Oxford + scanning tips
From: Moose <olymoose@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2018 13:23:13 -0400
On 10/27/2018 5:34 AM, Philippe wrote:
I’ve started scanning negs and slides using my obsolete flatbed scanner, 
fighting dust (any cleaning tip welcome) in the process.

http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Phileica/London+2011/2006-Oxford-scan--5.jpg.html

Leica R8 - Elmarit 24mm - neg film

Amities

Philippe, looking for a faster way to process thousands of frames … And here again, any 
recommendation welcome, well, below the 500€ tag I’d be ready to spend on a new 
scanner...

You don't say what sort of frames. It makes a difference. Some stuff about 
scanning:

Silver B&W:

This can't have dust and surface defects removed using an IR second scan. Aggressive dust removal saves endless time spotting. CH and Jan have given their strategies, although both were used on slides.

My limited experience finds that eliminating static charge on the film, then blowing dust off, is effective. I don't know what's out there these days. I use this thingie from years ago, designed to eliminate static charges on vinyl records. <http://www.moosemystic.net/Gallery/tech/Misc/StaticEliminate.jpg>

Polaroid Dust Removal, a long ago orphaned bit of software, available free on the web, does a wonderful job of cleaning up dust, and also seriously whacks image detail. Used in a layer in PS, the mask painted in/out, it can save lots of spotting time. In this example, I used it only for the sky. <http://www.moosemystic.net/Gallery/Others/BSwale/Home2_dipton-srp15-1200px.htm>

Kodachrome:

KR also has silver in the finished transparency, and was not IR cleanable. However, both VueScan and Silverfast have worked out ways to do it.

Color Neg, Chromogenic B&W and non KR slides:

I have found IR cleaning to be magic for color negs and non KR slides with my Canon FS4000 film scanner and 5000F flatbed and Vuescan; a HUGE time and sanity saver.

Jan found IR cleaning with his Nikon scanner to compromise fine detail of slides. I haven't noticed that with the Canon. I did find that multiple passes could wring a tiny bit more detail out of recent films. A lot of older and faster films just don't have the detail, anyway.

Scanners:

AG and CH found veiling flare in their Nikon scans. After a lot of trouble and "repairs", CH abandoned them. The Nikons have shallow DoF, which has caused some people trouble, and a semi coherent light source, which tends to accentuate scratches, etc. Tina has scanned many, many thousands of slides with a Nikon and auto slide loader.

CH just posted another pic of his camera "scan" set-up and Jan recently described his. I would use a small light table, rather than the flash CH uses, but otherwise the same set-up.

If you are mostly looking at sticks of negs and batches of slides I think the only good quality consumer scanners still being made and serviced may be flatbed Epsons? They make under an $200 model with IR and 3.4 Dmax, but that only does 4 slides or two sticks of film at a time, as well as their much more expensive top line models.

Work flow:

I load the scanner, then physically scan all frames to "RAW" files in Vuescan. I don't need to be present while that goes on. I then "scan" those files to conventional TIFFs, which is very quick. If you ever end up at that point, I can give a couple of hints about how to make it easier/better.

Hopefully Helpful Moose

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What if the Hokey Pokey *IS* what it's all about?
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