As photography transitions from film to the digital realm, you face the task of scanning your negatives so you can incorporate them into the world of software-based photo editing, retouching and ...
We’re going old-school with this week’s Tech 911 column—Lifehacker’s weekly Q&A where we solve your quirky technological issues. While plenty of people now use their smartphones as their default ...
If you're using a Hewlett-Packard Scanjet flatbed scanner with a Transparent Materials Adapter, you can scan 35mm slides and negatives using the TMA attachment. Because light travels through slides ...
Shooting a roll of analog film and developing negatives can be an enjoyable experience. However, scanning those negatives to create digital files is often slow, cumbersome, and requires heavy ...
Honestech, Inc., a leading developer and marketer of digital video and Internet Protocol (IP) software technology for multimedia content has released honestech Film Scan&Save TM which allows you to ...
If you buy a light box and turn it upside down over your negs/slides, you can scan them on any flatbed.<BR><BR>Without the software that picks off individual frames and does color correction for each ...
So, as I begin my journey into film, I'm realizing instead of paying to scan or print every roll (120 film mostly, 6x7), that being able to view the negative/slides either at pick (and then give them ...
Epson on Friday introduced the Perfection V300 Photo scanner. The scanner costs $99.99. The Perfection V300 Scanner features a “high-rise” lid. The Perfection V300 Photo sports 4800 x 9600 dot per ...
My husband’s first career was “professional photographer” and he built his first darkroom as a teenager. That explains why my garage has boxes upon boxes of slides and negatives. Many negatives are in ...