I amnot sure of which group to post to but here goes
Heres a switch, my son called ,he is in North Carolina, I am in Ohio. He has been invited to enter some of his wood work in a juried show. But they require color slides be submitted for judging. Of course all he has is a digital camera. I use to do this for my wifes work with my equipment when you could get slide film and get it processes locally .Now I. am surprised that anyone is still doing this with slides. Any idea of who coverts digital pictures back to slides nowadays and in the North Carolina area
Does he print them? If he does, then it's straightforward copy work, just like you did for your wife. There are several threads about copying flat art in the archives.
If you want to go from a digital file to a slide, then that's a matter for discussion on APUG's sister site hybridphoto.com.
I amnot sure of which group to post to but here goes
Here’s a switch, my son called ,he is in North Carolina, I am in Ohio. He has been invited to enter some of his wood work in a juried show. But they require color slides be submitted for judging. Of course all he has is a digital camera. I use to do this for my wife’s work with my equipment when you could get slide film and get it processes locally .Now I. am surprised that anyone is still doing this with slides. Any idea of who coverts digital pictures back to slides nowadays and in the North Carolina area
Tell him to call JW Photo Labs in Raleigh. They're an amazing lab with really affordable pricing for most things. They also have a shipping/courier service for people around and out of the state.
Simplest answer is to have him make the best prints from the digital files possible, and in a reasonably large size, say 5x7 or 8x10, then you treat them like a copy job, and photograph them onto slide film. This will be cheaper to accomplish than trying to find a lab with a film recorder still set up to do slides.
One question, though is whether slides produced directly from the digital files are acceptable for the competition. Presumably they want to know what prints will look like hanging in the show (and to be assured of their existence), and they might want copy slides of the actual prints.
One question, though is whether slides produced directly from the digital files are acceptable for the competition. Presumably they want to know what prints will look like hanging in the show (and to be assured of their existence), and they might want copy slides of the actual prints.
Sorry. Forget what I wrote. Somehow I glossed over that and jumped from "he has a digital camera" to the idea that this was a photography competition and he needed slides of his work.
In that case, it really is a different thing to photograph three-dimensional art, and the main issue is to be able to light it in a way that shows it off well.
Simplest answer is to have him make the best prints from the digital files possible, and in a reasonably large size, say 5x7 or 8x10, then you treat them like a copy job, and photograph them onto slide film. This will be cheaper to accomplish than trying to find a lab with a film recorder still set up to do slides.