Herb Chong wrote: > > since you are scanning them anyway, the only safe way to do it is to correct them > digitally. any treatment of the originals themselves have a chance of damaging them. > if you are going to treat the originals, be sure to take copy slides of them first. > Hi Herb, and first of all thanks for your help. I understand your point, but the problem is that the digital retouching in these particular slides doesn't work very well. They are photos of paintings and drawings, full of detail, and you can't simply use something like the rubberstamp in Photoshop. It becomes too obvious, and I am not happy at all with with the results. This was my first choice, as I don't want to damage the original slides, but I would like to know if there is a way to clean them without too much risk. It would be nice if the collective brain of the PDML could give a pointer to a non destructive way to clean the originals.
------------------------------------------------------------------ Carlos Royo [EMAIL PROTECTED] Zaragoza (Aragon) - Spain ------------------------------------------------------------------