wogster
Member
You'll need a screen or at least a nice white (or as close as possible to white) wall. The lighter, whiter, and more even the better. Dedicated screens can be brighter but otherwise aren't that much better, just far more convenient. I have an old one the surface of which seems to be coming apart form age or something so thinking about replacing mine soon myself.
A hint for showing your slides to friends and family - slide shows got a bad reputation because people would put together shows of dozens to hundreds of their slides from some vacation and show them while droning on and putting everyone to sleep. "And here we are with an elephant...and here's uncle Henry drinking a beer at the pub...and...zzzzzzzz" Chose some of your very best slides, and it helps if there's a place you can easily darken that you can leave the projector set up so people can just quickly and easily view them, and show no more than, say, 20 really impressive images at a time. A dozen is better. Leave them wanting to come back later to see more, not bored by every possible slide so that the good ones are diluted.
The key is the first edit needs to be brutal. Any slides that are too dark, too light, out of focus, wrong colour balance, bad composition, toss them. Even if they don't seem that bad, toss them. On the second edit, get rid of the duplicates, 20 images of a blonde girl in a bikini are logical duplicates of each other, your slide show only needs one of them. You don't toss those, you put them to the side. You will eventually get down to 30 or 40 slides, now comes the hard part, arrange the slides to tell the story, it should not need narration. If some of the slides, don't help the story, leave them out.
In other words Roger is right, a good slide show is short, tells it's story and then ends before it gets boring.