What scanner to you use?  Do you usually (always) scan slides or film?  And what 
specifically wrong with the scan results?  Then we could make suggestions.

One of the common complaints about Vuescan is that the image is bland or washed-out, 
but this is what Vuescan is designed to do.  Most scanner software is designed to do 
black and white point tweaking, color control tweaking, and other Photoshop-like 
adjustments in the scanner software so that hopefully you would have to do minimal 
further adjustments in PS or your graphics program.

I prefer to do all of my tweaking in Photoshop and Vuescan's strength and design is to 
capture all of the available information in the film and transfer it to Photoshop or 
whatever to do all adjustments in a program designed to do such adjustments, with 
Levels and Curves and layers and everything else that is available.

Maris

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Preston Earle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2001 6:44 PM
Subject: VueScan Improvements Was: Re: filmscanners: Polaroid Insight vs. Silverfast 
AI vs. Vuescan


| After struggling for some time to understand VueScan and get decent
| scans from it, I finally get pretty good scans most of the time, though
| I'm not sure why. I think the difficulty is in the User instructions and
| Help Files. If they were as good as the program, it would be worth $100!
| 
| It's probably a lot to expect that a talented software programmer would
| also be a terrific technical writer. Further, someone who knows the
| program inside out can have difficulty seeing just what a new user needs
| to know (and how to explain it).
| 
| The Help files contain a lot of information about what a guy *can* do,
| but it doesn't give much help as to what he *should* do.
| 
| Perhaps it would be helpful for some of you guys who know the program
| from a user's standpoint to write some instructions on how you scan,
| what settings you use (and why), what works for you and what doesn't.
| Knowing what scanner you use and your expectations (low, medium, high)
| would be helpful. Us neophytes could study through them and pick up a
| lot of knowledge you've dredged from the hard school of experience.
| 
| Ed could then concentrate on improving the software.
| 
| Preston Earle
| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| 
| 
| 

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