![]() ![]() I copy the negs with a bit of the border included. I can do it now but its a steep learning curve. Hero in the 'messin-with-cameras-for-the-hell-of-it department'. I've not read this bit of advice anywhere I had to discover it myself. Do not rely on auto white balance because the orange mask buggers it up. Importantly you must have your camera set to the right colour balance depending on the light source. It sounds simple but takes a bit of time to get used to it. Open photoshop, select adjust levels, click on the right hand dropper and sample the border colour. Philslizzy wrote: I can do it now but its a steep learning curve. ![]() Members have used a DSLR for "scanning" negs and have achieved very good results. Well you're in luck as there are threads here where members have used a DSLR for "scanning" negs and have achieved very good results. I assume you photographed the neg with a digital camera. Well if there was an easy answer there would be no need to use a film scanner. past gear Tele Rolleiflex and Rollei SL66. Contax 139, Fuji STX-2, Konica Autoreflex TC, FS-1, FT-1, Minolta X-700, X-300, XD-11, SRT101b, Nikon EM, FM, F4, F90X, Olympus OM2, Pentax S3, Spotmatic, Pentax ME super, Praktica TL 5B, & BC1,, Ricoh KR10super, Yashica T5D, Bronica Etrs, Mamiya RB67 pro AND drum roll:- a Sony Nex 3 I assume you photographed the neg with a digital camera.Ĭanon A1, AV1, T70 & T90, EOS 300 and EOS300v, Chinon CE and CP-7M. It so easy to set black and white points.Excalibur wrote: Well if there was an easy answer there would be no need to use a film scanner. I love the GIMP for this because of how the Levels control works. I don't use the GIMP itself to scan, but I have used it many times to edit the resulting scans. If I remember correctly, it also works for black and white negatives. My Epson Scanner has an option on the scan page to indicate that you are scanning negatives. You might find this discussion over on the Meet The Gimp Forum usefulį/index.php/topic,711.0.html Yes, a bit of blue correction on these hideous ion scanner works fine Most of the time I do batch scanning through Irfanview. My Plustek 7200i uses Silverfast, which has plugin for Photoshop, not Gimp. I don't scan with Gimp, for I don't trust it for jobs like printing and scanning. In fact Photivo has some interesting dynamic range controls (better than RAWTherapee). 16 bit depth is normally not important, but this is exactly the kind of operations where 8 bit resolution really doesn't cut it.įor a 16bit scan you could use RawTherapee or Photivo to convert from 16bit to 8bit tiffs for pixel level editing in GIMP. You're best off scanning in 16 bits and using something like ImageMagick for the initial reversion, color adjustment and dynamic range expansion. I did find a plug through "python-fu" that may work, that said, I may have to install earlier versions in order for it to work properly. However, I'm using the scanner on my printer with 4800dpi and no program to clear orange tint of 35mm film. Yep, scanned on my epson, PP'd in gimp.no problemo!, check my asia pix if you want some examples.some are PP'd in picnik as well.Īh yes, it is easy if you have a photo scanner with additional programs supplied to clear the orange tint of 35mm film. ![]() Has anyone successfully scanned color negatives using Gimp. ![]()
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