Sure. Here is a 100% crop from the upper left hand corner of the window. I adjusted the levels to make the problem more apparent boncratious.info/CherryBlossomDining-crop.jpg And for adventurous few who want to see more, here is a much larger crop preserved in the tiff format and unadjusted, just in case you want to look further. It's about a sixth of the size of the original, but since the original was a 563 MB file, this one is about 101 MB. boncratious.info/CherryBlossomDining-lrg-crop.tif
gary wrote: > Could you crop a piece of the image where you see the problem? That is, > a full resolution scan, but a small piece where the problem occurs. > > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >> Does anyone have any thoughts or suggestions on the following issue: >> >> I just did a scan of a Fuji Astia 6x7 slide It is about 2/3'rds dark, >> shadow and silhouette, one thirds correctly exposed, bright image >> through a window (of sorts). The scan was with the Nikon LS-8000 with >> the glass film holder, set to 8x multi-pass scan, with a single CCD (so >> it took forever, but should be good quality). What I got was a scan >> where some of the dark areas next to the bright areas got light >> spill-over making them lighter. It almost looks like a faint light leak >> into the dark areas -- a slight fogging of the some of the dark areas. >> It is especially evident above the window, with the seated figures, and >> on the middle of the right edge of the image. It is definitely NOT in >> the slide. You can see it here (depending on your monitor, some of it >> might be hard to see): boncratious.info/CherryBlossomDining.jpg Does >> anyone know what causing this and how I can avoid it or stop it from >> happening? >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body