John51
Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2014
- Messages
- 797
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- 35mm
Thanks for that, it helped.
My menus on Vuescan are laid out a bit different, I have learned to scroll down


There's the terminology and adjustments that traditional scan software uses then there's Hamrick's terminology. Don't you just love it? NOT!My menus on Vuescan are laid out a bit different, I have learned to scroll downFound a menu that asked what type of histogram but I found nothing to say 'show histogram'. Then I tried 'graph'
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Thanks for that, it helped.
My menus on Vuescan are laid out a bit different, I have learned to scroll downFound a menu that asked what type of histogram but I found nothing to say 'show histogram'. Then I tried 'graph'
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I thought the idea of the pre-view scan was to eliminate those not worth scanning. Generally out of the siz 35mm my Epson V300 pre-views I rarely fully scan all 6.If you take the time to learn Vuescan it pays off big time. For example, on a flatbed scanner if you do your "preview" at the same resolution you want to scan at then all you have to do is make your crop and hit save instead of scan. Vuescan saves your file from the preview so there is no need for another pass. If you need to do a lot of proof scans that one feature alone is worth buying Viewscan.
I very recently downloaded Vuescan and it just seems to emulate the Epson software - certainly no improvement. before I completely dump it i will try it with my cheap and cheerful Lidl quick 'scanner' as the software with that is very limited.I tried Vuescan years ago and hated it. I find that the Epson software does a fine job.
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?
Spiritually, I love the darkroom. In practical terms, good riddance. My goal is to make images, not crawl on my knees across broken glass to get there. And to say nothing of costs.
Seeing a print in the fixer, deciding that it needs some dodging and/or burning/whatever and then trying that immediately is where the broken glass comes from imo.
That will get better even before you have your own space.Guilty as charged. If I can ever get into a position where I can have my own darkroom I suspect I’ll approach the process more deliberately. As it is, I’m rushing (and fumbling) under time constraints, and largely producing sub-par final prints.
Nah. Scanner technology hasn't changed in the last 10+ years except for the incorporation of LED lights instead of fluorescent tubes. Even that didn't provide much of an advantage other than shorter warmup times. I use an Epson 4990, which was the model prior to the V700. There's nothing the newer V700-V850 offer that makes me want to upgrade.If eric wouldn't mind my jumping on this post, can I ask a question re: scanning for 4X5 - which will likely be something I'm doing a bit of in a while? When it comes to flatbed scanners... Epson V700, V750, V800 and V850 series, are there any REAL or important differences? These are the scanners that seem to be more current and have Betterscanning mounts - in the event you get finnicky.
I think I've read that the V800 and V850 don't really add anything the V700/V750 weren't already doing, but wonder whether that's right? Finally, I've been very happy with used equipment - cameras and lenses, and even a used Nikon Coolscan (which won't work for 4X5), but the last Epson scanner I bought was a V300 - which was comparatively crude I suppose. I wonder whether there's any risk in an older, used V700 or V750 I should be aware of? I'd love to hear what you guys have found..
Scan "flat." Think of it like a digicam's RAW image.
Then go back and do what you will. The more I scan and understand the opportunities in my Canon Scangear SW, the less I miss the wet darkroom.
The results are limited by the scanner hardware and its dMax. You can't get blood from a turnip.I was unimpressed by the Epson software, and Vuescan's demo is so restrictive that I cannot determine if it will do what I want/need it to do. When I bought my Epson V750, it came with SilverFast AI 7 (yeah, that long ago). I've kept up to date and with my recent transition to an iMac Pro, bought the SilverFast AI 9 upgrade. Pricey, but worth every penny. It feels like I have an all-new scanner, it made such a difference. That, and now having 64gb of RAM on tap.
But seriously, SilverFast is just SO good as scanning software. I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Eric hasn't been around for a long time. But I will add my 2 cents.If eric wouldn't mind my jumping on this post, can I ask a question re: scanning for 4X5 - which will likely be something I'm doing a bit of in a while? When it comes to flatbed scanners... Epson V700, V750, V800 and V850 series, are there any REAL or important differences? These are the scanners that seem to be more current and have Betterscanning mounts - in the event you get finnicky.
I think I've read that the V800 and V850 don't really add anything the V700/V750 weren't already doing, but wonder whether that's right? Finally, I've been very happy with used equipment - cameras and lenses, and even a used Nikon Coolscan (which won't work for 4X5), but the last Epson scanner I bought was a V300 - which was comparatively crude I suppose. I wonder whether there's any risk in an older, used V700 or V750 I should be aware of? I'd love to hear what you guys have found..
That's what I do with my Epsonscan and V850 and Lightroom. Although, I'm not sure if it matters if you scan flat to 0 and 255 and adjust levels in post.Eric hasn't been around for a long time. But I will add my 2 cents.
I use an Epson V700 Pro. My general MO is to set white and black points turn off all wizzy things and let'r rip. The rest is done in PS.
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