Zathras
Subscriber
Hi everybody,
I've been scanning some old negatives that I shot on Arista.EDU ULTRA film and noticed that
when I inverted them in Photoshop for post processing, all the pictures came out with a nice
warm image tone that I've never gotten with any other B&W film, straight out of the scanner.
The examples I'm posting here received minimal post processing, only curve, levels, exposure
adjustments and image sizing. I made no color adjustments at all for the final images.
I used an old Epson flatbed scanner with the stock 35mm film holder, Vuescan for my scanning
software and Adobe Photoshop for post processing
In Vuescan, I set the input controls to the following;
Options:"Profesional"
Task: "Scan To File"
Source: "Perfection 4490"
Mode: "Transparency"
Media: "Image"
Preview Resolution: "300 dpi"
Scan dpi: "450" for these pictures
Number of passes: "1"
I then did a preview scan, cropped the image and checked the "Lock exposure" box.
I did not select the infrared clean, restore colors, restore fading, grain reduction or sharpening
options. I almost never use any of these options while scanning.
In the output control section, I set the default folder for where I wanted to keep the files,
then I check the "Raw file" option, then I chose "Raw DNG format", set Printed size to
"Scan size" and the Magnification (%) to "100" and finally scanned a few negs. I then opened
the scans in Photoshop and processed them as described in the first paragraph. Here
are a few examples of my results.
1967 VW Bus, Carmel, California.
Minolta XE7, MC Rokkor-X 50mm ƒ1.4
The Robert Dollar Co. Engine No. 3, Niles Canyon Railway, Sunol, California, with my daughter in the foreground.
Pentax-MX, SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7
My daughter on the Niles Canyon Railway train, Sunol California
Pentax-MX, SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7
1967 VW Bus, rear view, Carmel, California.
Minolta XE7, MC Rokkor-X 50mm ƒ1.4
I really like the warm tones I'm getting from scans from this film without any
effort on my part. All the other B&W films I've scanned so far have been much
more neutral in color and required a lot of adjustment to get an mage color that
I liked. Has anyone else experienced this?
I've been scanning some old negatives that I shot on Arista.EDU ULTRA film and noticed that
when I inverted them in Photoshop for post processing, all the pictures came out with a nice
warm image tone that I've never gotten with any other B&W film, straight out of the scanner.
The examples I'm posting here received minimal post processing, only curve, levels, exposure
adjustments and image sizing. I made no color adjustments at all for the final images.
I used an old Epson flatbed scanner with the stock 35mm film holder, Vuescan for my scanning
software and Adobe Photoshop for post processing
In Vuescan, I set the input controls to the following;
Options:"Profesional"
Task: "Scan To File"
Source: "Perfection 4490"
Mode: "Transparency"
Media: "Image"
Preview Resolution: "300 dpi"
Scan dpi: "450" for these pictures
Number of passes: "1"
I then did a preview scan, cropped the image and checked the "Lock exposure" box.
I did not select the infrared clean, restore colors, restore fading, grain reduction or sharpening
options. I almost never use any of these options while scanning.
In the output control section, I set the default folder for where I wanted to keep the files,
then I check the "Raw file" option, then I chose "Raw DNG format", set Printed size to
"Scan size" and the Magnification (%) to "100" and finally scanned a few negs. I then opened
the scans in Photoshop and processed them as described in the first paragraph. Here
are a few examples of my results.
1967 VW Bus, Carmel, California.
Minolta XE7, MC Rokkor-X 50mm ƒ1.4
The Robert Dollar Co. Engine No. 3, Niles Canyon Railway, Sunol, California, with my daughter in the foreground.
Pentax-MX, SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7
My daughter on the Niles Canyon Railway train, Sunol California
Pentax-MX, SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7
1967 VW Bus, rear view, Carmel, California.
Minolta XE7, MC Rokkor-X 50mm ƒ1.4
I really like the warm tones I'm getting from scans from this film without any
effort on my part. All the other B&W films I've scanned so far have been much
more neutral in color and required a lot of adjustment to get an mage color that
I liked. Has anyone else experienced this?
Last edited: