I have been alternating between Epson V600 and DSLR (well, actually mirrorless) scanning with my Fuji. The advantage of a camera is speed (especially when scanning 35mm) and resolution, which can be mind-blowing if I'm willing to stitch. I also feel that the camera gives me more bit depth for post-scanning corrections, especially in dealing with dense negatives.
The advantage of the scanner is uniformity and convenience of not having to stitch medium format scans. The uniformity is especially appealing, because my macro lens on the camera is not very good in the corners even at f/8 (probably due to field curvature). This is especially annoying when stitching, because I get these artifacts when stitching software is trying to "marry" two blurry edges. The lens in question is a budget Rokinon 100m Macro.
I hear great things about Fuji's own 90mm Macro but that's a $1,300 lens! I have zero interest in macro photography and that's a lot of money to spend just to improve corners of film scans. I wonder if there's a cheaper older lens I can use with an adapter. I already have an EF-to-X adapter, so getting a used Canon 100mm f/2.8L macro will be much cheaper, for example. I can't find any reference to its field flatness though... Anything else I can consider?
Thanks!
P.S. Another reason I do not want to spend too much is because I have (perhaps unreasonably) high hopes for the new Plustek Pro 120 which was announced almost 2 years ago and still hasn't showed up anywhere.
The advantage of the scanner is uniformity and convenience of not having to stitch medium format scans. The uniformity is especially appealing, because my macro lens on the camera is not very good in the corners even at f/8 (probably due to field curvature). This is especially annoying when stitching, because I get these artifacts when stitching software is trying to "marry" two blurry edges. The lens in question is a budget Rokinon 100m Macro.
I hear great things about Fuji's own 90mm Macro but that's a $1,300 lens! I have zero interest in macro photography and that's a lot of money to spend just to improve corners of film scans. I wonder if there's a cheaper older lens I can use with an adapter. I already have an EF-to-X adapter, so getting a used Canon 100mm f/2.8L macro will be much cheaper, for example. I can't find any reference to its field flatness though... Anything else I can consider?
Thanks!
P.S. Another reason I do not want to spend too much is because I have (perhaps unreasonably) high hopes for the new Plustek Pro 120 which was announced almost 2 years ago and still hasn't showed up anywhere.