My dad has around 1000 35mm color slides that has taken all over the world... he is the only one who knows what all of them are. He would like to scan them to digital images, sort them into albums, ...
My mom has gobs of pictures that she took when I was a kid. The original prints are starting to get yellow as the years go by, but she has all the negatives. If you or someone you know has lots of ...
Scanning film is great for archival purposes as well as sharing said photos digitally. However, if you’re scanning 120 film, aka medium format, it can be expensive to get the requisite hardware. 35mm ...
If you're using a Hewlett-Packard Scanjet flatbed scanner with a Transparent Materials Adapter, you can scan 35mm slides and negatives using the TMA attachment. Because light travels through slides ...
My parents have got shoeboxes full of envelopes of old, mostly 3x5 35mm prints and their original negatives. I'd like to digitize these, and I'm also contemplating playing around with their old Pentax ...
Wolverine Data, Inc. has introduced a new and innovative standalone film scanner that instantly converts 35mm film negatives and slides into digital images without the need for a computer or ...
If you’d like to add a collection of prints, negatives, or slides to your digital photo collection, you’ll need to scan them. In recent years, the quality and affordability of consumer scanners have ...
Film isn't dead. It just needs a new digital life. Enter the Cintel Scanner 2 from Blackmagic Design. A 35mm film scanner that can scan 4K HDR files directly into Resolve 15. Film has traditionally ...
Canon on Monday announced the CanoScan 3200F Color Image Scanner, which lets you scan 35mm slides, 35mm negatives, photos and documents with a USB 2.0-equipped Mac. The CanoScan 3200F — which ...
The quiet return of drum scanning in the film photography revival ...
People digitalize 35mm negatives no longer have to guess at the quality of pictures thanks to an innovative new film scanner launched by wholesale electronics gadgets supplier Chinavasion this week.
No one uses 35mm cameras anymore. Okay, most people don't use them, I still know a few photographers that refuse to move into the digital age because they think the older 35mm film has a better look ...