Hi Chris,
I have been using the Kaiser Baas Photo Maker Touch for years and have scanned
thousands of negatives and slides.
It has a small touch screen and saves scans to an SD memory card for easy
transfer to Mac or PC.
The Touch model has a 9 megapixel camera to capture the scan and you can ma
I seem recall JB HiFi. It has two racks that hold five slides/negs. You push
the rack through the machine and click. (A bit like an old fashioned slide
projector) It works across Windows and Mac - the plug in is USB
B
> On 10 Nov 2015, at 14:44, Chris Burton wrote:
>
> Hi Bill
>
> Thanks
Hi Bill
Thanks very much for your suggestion. I had no idea such a unit existed!!!
I will do some online searching on it to see what it is and where I might
be able to get one?
Have you used this before? Does it do batch scanning and work with a mac?
Best regards
Chris
On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at
Chris,
I would recommend using something like Kaiser Baas Photomaker. Its a
standalone neg and slide scanner that is very easy to to use and not expensive.
Bill
> On 10 Nov 2015, at 10:13, Chris Burton wrote:
>
> Hi all
>
> In relation to Bill's recent post, on scanning photos with a multi p
Hi all
In relation to Bill's recent post, on scanning photos with a multi printer,
I am interested to know if it is possible to scan negatives and slides on a
multi function printer?
I have an old Epson multi printer (with a flat bed top with a lid) that
cannot, but understand some multi printers
I have been scanning old photos with Vuescan and this has been fine.
When I scan negatives using the special negative strip holder on my Epson
650 it takes forever with a single strip. I followed the Vuescan settings
but it takes several minutes each strip.
Even then the result is not good. I ge
I have seen it done by constructing a small box of Melamine with a
globe inside, masking it to suit the size of the negative and sitting
it on top of a scanner and It worked a treat. I cant remember the
finer details so you may have to experiment a bit with the power of
the globe.
Regar
flatbed scanners seem to do a good job with medium format stuff...
these days even a professional quality flat bed scanner is under the
$500 mark though make sure you get it with the back light
lid. and a good scanner is handy for other stuff (prints with
missing negatives... scanning
I have a heap of old negatives that I would like to get scanned.
The price of having them done seems quite high these days, with most
photo outlets going digital.
(Are there any old type photo booths left?)
I have 110ml 135ml & 2" by 2" Hassleblad negatives. Also some
really teensy ones f
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