Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen - PROBLEM FIXED - VERY SORRY

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
I'm extremely sorry for the repeat postings. I've had a major mailer problem that I've been trying to fix for 2-3 days, and I just managed to figure it out. Steve Bye

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-30 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

Re: filmscanners: Scan for television screen

2001-04-29 Thread Steve Bye
ro do this automatically. Steve Bye > Maris > Don¹t worry about dpi nor TV size, the image size is 720pixels x 480pixels > regardless of whether you have a 16" or 32" TV. Best save the file as an RGB > flat PS file, Mac PICT or TIFF. > > -- > > Regards > > Richard

RE: filmscanners: Nikon D1x and LS4000

2001-04-21 Thread Steve Bye
No one seems to be commenting on the huge difference between these two images. Film does have a lot of resolution, but it also has a lot of grain. There is a smoothness and evenness of tone to the D1X that film doesn't come close to. I'd love to see two prints from these two images, printed at

Re: questions

2000-10-10 Thread Steve Bye
1. i do a scan with silverfast at 48 bit hdr color. on the preview it looks fine. when it gets to photoshop it is extremely dark and requires extensive work to get it to a state that i believe is acceptable. is this normal? Yes. No gamma correction has been aplied to the raw scan so it look

Re: newbie question: what is scanner software needed for?

2000-10-08 Thread Steve Bye
You may be a newbie, but I think you have exactly the right scanning model in mind. Scanning software used to be required because 16 bit data could not be sent to Photoshop. Since you wanted to work on the high-bit data for best results, and only the scanning software had access to high-bit data,

Re: Adobe RGB (was: VueScan 6.2 Available)

2000-10-07 Thread Steve Bye
Actually, I think it was called SMPTE 240 in the 5.0 release, then became Adobe RGB in the 5.02 release. Steve - Original Message - From: "Bob Shomler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Saturday, October 07, 2000 11:05 AM Subject: Adobe RGB (was: VueScan 6.2 Available) >

Re: Selection Shape in Photoshop?

2000-10-03 Thread Steve Bye
Actually you can use the crop tool. Just crop with "fixed target size,." set the aspect ratio you want, but leave the resolution entry blank. It will crop without changing resolution. It also works to leave other entries blank. Steve - Original Message - From: "Johnny Deadman" <[EMAIL PR

Re: Polaroid 120 WAS New scanners rumor ?

2000-10-01 Thread Steve Bye
I can't remember where I saw it, but there was a press release from Photokina (sp?) about the Polaroid Ultra and also a Polaroid 120 that will be available next year. It scanned 35mm and 120 film, and had a Dmax of 3.9. No price was given. Assuming the 3.9 Dmax is real, this could be pretty nice,

Re: what's the best method to scan B&W negs

2000-09-25 Thread Steve Bye
I've been gone for a while, but I thought I'd just write to say that I now agree that there is a direct relationship between scanner dynamic range and bits. I was wrong. Sorry for the confusion. And thanks for your patience when I wouldn't give up on my point of view. I was confusing bits in the