I was wondering, for best results do you think a "flat" scan as apposed to a scan that looks closest to what we want as an end result is best?
This is what I do as well.Scan it close to the way you want it without losing the ends.
This is good practice. Scanners, unless it's a dedicated B&W scanner, don't scan in B&W. They convert the raw scan to B&W in software after running a color scan. You might as well take control over that and do it yourself and see if you can do a better job. If not, then doing a B&W scan is fine. I also scan to keep everything in the histogram as far from clipping as possible, then adjust the colors as necessary in software.I always adjust the histogram at the scanner so that no clipping occurs. Then I usually dump the red and blue channels.
I scan in 16 bit b&w so I don't think there is any colour channels.
I use the 750 Pro. I tried scanning in 48 bit colour but couldn't see any advantage. Maybe I'm missing something...I scan in 48 bit colour. I use the Epson 750. What scanner are you using, Eric?
Scanners scan in RGB. In Photoshop, you can isolate the red, green, and blue channels. Usually, what you do is look to see which one offers the best tonality. The green channel is probably most often used, but you can select any single channel, or combination there of to get the results you like.I use the 750 Pro. I tried scanning in 48 bit colour but couldn't see any advantage. Maybe I'm missing something...
I can turn off the red and blue channels in the Epson scanning software. Will try that as well.
I just did all of this and compared the scans from using just grn from the scanner vs scanning in full rgb and then cutting out the red and blue chan's in PS. The PS one was better. When I had done my initial experiments years ago it didn't seem to make much difference but with the new scanner I guess it does.I get rid of the blue and red channels in PS, not at the scanner.
Image - Adjustments - Channel Mixer. Click on the monochrome box,( bottom left). Zero out the red, and blue channels. Put Green too 100%.
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