Please don't cc me directly and mail to the list. I clearly subscribe to the list and getting two copies of the same email is anyoing.
hfigui...@teaser.fr said: > According to Jonathan Buzzard <jonat...@buzzard.me.uk>: > > You might want to consider looking at Vuescan. It is not free, but it > > is targeted at this sort of scanning and will do the sort of colour > > correction of negatives that you are after, with results that surpass > > anything that can easily be achieved using Sane. > > > > http://www.hamrick.com/ > > Seriously, I don't think it is a solution. It does not run on not i386 > Linux... If only I had the skills... In a perfect world there would be a open source equivalent of Vuescan. In the mean time it is a possible solution for large numbers of people. Over 90% of desktop/workstation computers in use are x86 derivatives. In this particular case Vuescan was indeed a solution for the original poster, in his own words Jonathan, thanks for your feedback and suggestion. Yes, I tried it out and you are absolutely right - the Vuescan is the best program for my type of scanning I found. My scanned negs and slides are mostly roll film - 6x7, 6x9 and I do a lot of 4x5inch as well. Program works fine, image scan quality is very good and with the many options to set specific parameters, the results can be optimized for all films, densities and lighting situations. Thanks for your help and best regards George Just because it might not be a possible solution for you, because you don't use an x86 based computer, does *not* mean it is not a solution. It is *no* excuse for berating a perfectly sound suggestion that provided a solution to the person asking the question. JAB. -- Jonathan A. Buzzard Email: jonathan (at) buzzard.me.uk Northumberland, United Kingdom. Tel: +44 1661-832195