The "which scanner" question has been beaten to death on other sites, but since I have some very specific needs, I am asking for APUG advice. I use...120mm film. I have a cheap document printer (which I might upgrade). I want to buy... flat bed scanner that will allow me to: 1)....2) scan to the computer so I can then print a contact sheet (contact strips). I don't intend to make finished prints, as with any contact sheet, I just want to see my choices and figure what needs to be done before going into the dark room....Any suggestions?
FWIW, I think the quoted dmax for the 4990 is about 3.8, the newer ones are supposed to go to 4.0, I believe.
...
It's actually 3.4:
http://www.epson.co.uk/scanners/Epson-Perfection-[U]4490[/U]-Photo-Scanner.htm
The difference may not sound like much. but it does matter - a scanner with inadequate dmax will simply not render highlight detail in b+w negs properly (if at all) and conversely is likely to produce lots of artefacts in scans of the shadows of full-blooded prints.
Also, as a guide...I recommend a dmax figure of 3.6 as a minimum.
THIS is the scanner I bought last year and LOVE it !!
http://www.shopping.hp.com/product/photography/scanner/1/storefronts/L1957A%2523B1H;HHOJSID=RsfYLY2LSJSnsQ6MKbpqRTWgT00nLBGwRdC6ppvXKZxPypCGnvBG!2057424526
I bought it for the 3 different format capability.
Steve
I don't think a scanner is a very good piece of equipment to evaluate a negative. The best thing to use for that is a contact print -- you don't need anything special to make those.
- Developer (D72)
- Fixer (you already have it)
- Water (stop/wash)
- Photographic paper (grade 2, cheap)
- A bulb
- A piece of glass to keep the negative flat.
Thats it.
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