Well, Margulis is a can of worms, in my opinion, unless you have a CMYK workflow. One thing that might help is to set your output to sRGB in Vuescan. sRGB seems to give more saturated image than AdobeRGB when scanning with Vuescan, although I don't know why. Also make sure your scanner is warmed up properly. Jon --- Jim Sharp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thanks to everyone who replied to this! > > I downloaded the Margulis .pdf files suggested and will study them > closely. I'm hoping that will help. I also intent to try a few of the > adjustments in Vuescan that I've yet to experiment with. > > I'll let you all know how I fare... > > -- > Jim __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get email at your own domain with Yahoo! Mail. http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/?.refer=text
- filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Jim Sharp
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Maris V. Lidaka, Sr.
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Robert E. Wright
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Michael Moore
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vues... Jim Sharp
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with ... Michael Moore
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Jim Sharp
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vues... Jon
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with ... Tony Sleep
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with ... Jim Sharp
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation w... Rob Geraghty
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation w... Jon
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturat... Tony Sleep
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vuescan Jim Sharp
- Re: filmscanners: Color saturation with Vues... Maris V. Lidaka, Sr.