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Best photo scanner
I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best
for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB |
#2
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Of course, it all depends on what you want to do with your prints. I am
having fabulous luck with the new Epson 2580 (US model, about $150 street, probably less). It offers print, slide and negative scanning, a nice set of software tools, and very clean results that I am able to use for semi-pro purposes. As for scanning tips, go to Google and type in 'scanning tips' and you'll hit a goldmine. I happen to like Wayne Fulton's extremely helpful ideas -- concise and easy to read. Oh, if you should buy the Epson be sure to read the setup manual very carefully. Setup is a breeze but there are some rules..... JB wrote: I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB |
#3
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"JB" wrote in message
... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. For tips: http://www.scantips.com -- CSM1 http://www.carlmcmillan.com -- |
#4
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CSM1 wrote: "JB" wrote in message ... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. For tips: http://www.scantips.com Good Advice! For scanning Photos, almost any flatbed scanner will give excellent results. Also don't get carried away trying to scan at the highest resolution the scanner offers. As CSM1 suggested, 300 dpi is about all you need because a print rarely has more information than that. If you want a warm fuzzy feeling you can try 600 ppi, but I doubt VERY seriously that you will notice ANY difference in image quality between the two, but the 600 dpi scan will contain 4X as many MB to store and manipulate in a photo editor. Bob Williams |
#5
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Bob Williams wrote: CSM1 wrote: "JB" wrote in message ... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. For tips: http://www.scantips.com Good Advice! For scanning Photos, almost any flatbed scanner will give excellent results. Also don't get carried away trying to scan at the highest resolution the scanner offers. As CSM1 suggested, 300 dpi is about all you need because a print rarely has more information than that. If you want a warm fuzzy feeling you can try 600 ppi, but I doubt VERY seriously that you will notice ANY difference in image quality between the two, but the 600 dpi scan will contain 4X as many MB to store and manipulate in a photo editor. Bob Williams Hi Bob... I reply to you; but in reality to all of my peers and betters. I'd like to suggest a re-think of this, and invite any/all interested to experiment a bit. I've done it repeatedly, and am certain it's worth it. If - and that's a big if - you're certain that for now and for ever you only want to look at the pics on a monitor, or print them at the original size, then I'll (almost) agree with you. 300 dpi is going to get almost, if not all, of the info available. But - suppose you're scanning something now for posterity. Something like those school photos that we all carried in our wallets while the kids were growing. We don't know how future generations will feel about them - one day they may trigger memories or feelings that may want an 8 x 10 or better. Right? Well, I've proven over and over that scanning it at 2400, then de-noising/cleaning/etc (be prepared to spend lots of time) and saving that means 8 x 10's or larger will be availabe if ever they're wanted. Without ANY of the pixelation of upsampling!! Try it; it's true. Next, if you wish, you can downsample that image to say 800 600 for viewing, and after a bit of unsharp it will be much much sharper than scanning at 300 in the first place. Much! Save both - pass on both for future generations to do with as they will. I save mine on cd/dvd's as two subs under a descriptive name - ie: c:\wallet (.txt describing what the pics are) c:\wallet\view (800 * 600 fine quality jpeg's ) c:\wallet\print (huge ones's - tiff) c:\wallet\text (800 *600 fine quality scans of backs, if not blank) Just one old guy's opinion. I invite others. Ken |
#6
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CSM1 wrote:
"JB" wrote in message ... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. Another consideration, though, is color fidelity. My trusty pair of E3s (for which I paid $5 total) produce sufficiently muddied colors and insufficiently resolved shadows that they're virtually useless for scanning photos to any sort of archival quality, though they're fine for the black/white stuff I normally use them for (and for an occasional photo-to-webpage use). Are current scanners pretty much equally good as far as color fidelity goes? - Brooks -- The "bmoses-nospam" address is valid; no unmunging needed. |
#7
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"Ken Weitzel" wrote in message news:Ok5wd.503596$Pl.340620@pd7tw1no... Bob Williams wrote: CSM1 wrote: "JB" wrote in message ... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. For tips: http://www.scantips.com Good Advice! For scanning Photos, almost any flatbed scanner will give excellent results. Also don't get carried away trying to scan at the highest resolution the scanner offers. As CSM1 suggested, 300 dpi is about all you need because a print rarely has more information than that. If you want a warm fuzzy feeling you can try 600 ppi, but I doubt VERY seriously that you will notice ANY difference in image quality between the two, but the 600 dpi scan will contain 4X as many MB to store and manipulate in a photo editor. Bob Williams Hi Bob... I reply to you; but in reality to all of my peers and betters. I'd like to suggest a re-think of this, and invite any/all interested to experiment a bit. I've done it repeatedly, and am certain it's worth it. If - and that's a big if - you're certain that for now and for ever you only want to look at the pics on a monitor, or print them at the original size, then I'll (almost) agree with you. 300 dpi is going to get almost, if not all, of the info available. But - suppose you're scanning something now for posterity. Something like those school photos that we all carried in our wallets while the kids were growing. We don't know how future generations will feel about them - one day they may trigger memories or feelings that may want an 8 x 10 or better. Right? Well, I've proven over and over that scanning it at 2400, then de-noising/cleaning/etc (be prepared to spend lots of time) and saving that means 8 x 10's or larger will be availabe if ever they're wanted. Without ANY of the pixelation of upsampling!! Try it; it's true. I agree with you completely, Ken, and you saved me a lot of typing. The assumption with only scanning at 300 dpi is that all you want to do is duplicate the same size print, or view on-screen. I've made tons of enlargements from old black & white photos, and can say without hesitation that higher resolution images allow for FAR better enlargements. You just can't stretch 300DPI to a 4x enlargement, etc. without producing seriously bad effects. I agree that you should try and predict the intended use of the image...which is to say that you CAN'T really predict this! For that reason, I tend to scan larger than I currently want, just so that there is easy wiggle room. Starting with a big scan is far better than up-sampling a crummy 300dpi original. |
#8
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"Ken Weitzel" wrote in message
news:Ok5wd.503596$Pl.340620@pd7tw1no... Bob Williams wrote: CSM1 wrote: "JB" wrote in message ... I want to scan a large number of print photos, which scanner would work best for this? What tips do you have for scanning these? - JB For Paper photos and other flat stuff, the Maximum resolution you will ever need is 300-600 Dpi. Any flatbed scanner you buy today will easily have that resolution. For tips: http://www.scantips.com Good Advice! For scanning Photos, almost any flatbed scanner will give excellent results. Also don't get carried away trying to scan at the highest resolution the scanner offers. As CSM1 suggested, 300 dpi is about all you need because a print rarely has more information than that. If you want a warm fuzzy feeling you can try 600 ppi, but I doubt VERY seriously that you will notice ANY difference in image quality between the two, but the 600 dpi scan will contain 4X as many MB to store and manipulate in a photo editor. Bob Williams Hi Bob... I reply to you; but in reality to all of my peers and betters. I'd like to suggest a re-think of this, and invite any/all interested to experiment a bit. I've done it repeatedly, and am certain it's worth it. If - and that's a big if - you're certain that for now and for ever you only want to look at the pics on a monitor, or print them at the original size, then I'll (almost) agree with you. 300 dpi is going to get almost, if not all, of the info available. But - suppose you're scanning something now for posterity. Something like those school photos that we all carried in our wallets while the kids were growing. We don't know how future generations will feel about them - one day they may trigger memories or feelings that may want an 8 x 10 or better. Right? Well, I've proven over and over that scanning it at 2400, then de-noising/cleaning/etc (be prepared to spend lots of time) and saving that means 8 x 10's or larger will be availabe if ever they're wanted. Without ANY of the pixelation of upsampling!! Try it; it's true. Next, if you wish, you can downsample that image to say 800 600 for viewing, and after a bit of unsharp it will be much much sharper than scanning at 300 in the first place. Much! Save both - pass on both for future generations to do with as they will. I save mine on cd/dvd's as two subs under a descriptive name - ie: c:\wallet (.txt describing what the pics are) c:\wallet\view (800 * 600 fine quality jpeg's ) c:\wallet\print (huge ones's - tiff) c:\wallet\text (800 *600 fine quality scans of backs, if not blank) Just one old guy's opinion. I invite others. Ken I agree with Ken in the case of wallet size photos, you could scan at a higher resolution in order to get a larger image from the small image of a wallet. A wallet size is 2 x 3 inches, so if you want to blow up the image to an 8 x10, you would have to increase the size of the image by 4 times. Assume, 300 dpi for the most information the wallet photo contains, then to get a 4X enlargement, you scan at 1200 dpi. The cost of scanning at 1200 dpi is a large file size, the image will not contain any more information, it will just be bigger. Since, an 2 x 3 inch is not the same ratio as 8 x 10, you will crop some to the image to fit 8 x 10. A 2 x 3 is a 1:1.5 ratio, 8 x 10 is 1:1.25 ratio. The only time you need more than 300-600 dpi is when you want to enlarge a small photo. The photo still only contains about 300 dpi of information. There are exceptions to the rule. I have scanned documents at 600 dpi because the document contained fine lines that were missed at 300 dpi. Electronic schematics have fine lines running vertically and horizontally which are missed at 300 dpi. Wayne Fulton covers that on his Scantips.com. http://www.scantips.com/basics02.html page 1 http://www.scantips.com/basics2c.html page 2 Again, just about any scanner you buy today will have that much resolution. -- CSM1 http://www.carlmcmillan.com -- |
#9
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I'm not an expert at this, but about 6 or 8 years ago I compared a
number of scans made on my cheap Memorex (really Visioneer) 6136 scanner to the same photos scanned on a more expensive HP scanner. What I found was that, although the HP did a better job overall, each scanner had different strengths and weaknesses in color reproduction. Each had some group of photos that it reproduced well and others not so well - though they were different groups. The HP was more or less acceptable on everything I scanned, and good on some things. The Memorex was good on some things and poor at others - requiring considerable after the fact color correction. In the best of all worlds, we'd want to see 10 different photos of all types scanned on all the different scanners and posted to the web where we could compare them (is there such a site?) But even then, it's possible that an uncalibrated monitor would give misleading views of the strengths and weaknesses of each scanner. I'm hoping that the modern scanners are more consistently good. Alan |
#10
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"Alan Meyer" wrote in message oups.com... I'm not an expert at this, but about 6 or 8 years ago I compared a number of scans made on my cheap Memorex (really Visioneer) 6136 scanner to the same photos scanned on a more expensive HP scanner. What I found was that, although the HP did a better job overall, each scanner had different strengths and weaknesses in color reproduction. Each had some group of photos that it reproduced well and others not so well - though they were different groups. The HP was more or less acceptable on everything I scanned, and good on some things. The Memorex was good on some things and poor at others - requiring considerable after the fact color correction. In the best of all worlds, we'd want to see 10 different photos of all types scanned on all the different scanners and posted to the web where we could compare them (is there such a site?) But even then, it's possible that an uncalibrated monitor would give misleading views of the strengths and weaknesses of each scanner. I'm hoping that the modern scanners are more consistently good. Alan Here you can find photos by many cameras and most scanners that you can think of. http://www.photosig.com/go/photos -- CSM1 http://www.carlmcmillan.com -- |
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