Hello,
I recently inherited my Dad's collection of 616 negatives from the 40s, 50s and 60s. None were properly stored and I even found a few dozen on the dirt in the crawl space. I'd like to convert many of the negative to digital files, and was hoping for some tips on cleaning. I've read a lot about folks using rubbing alcohol and even kerosene. Some say regular drug store alcohol has too much water and that 98% alcohol is best. Some say never use water, others say use water and Dawn dish-washing soap. Some say don't try cleaning negative at all without being a pro. What would be a practical approach for me, with a few hundreg negatives that are probably no value to anyone else?
Next, I tried scanning on my cheap Epson scanner, but the results were dismal. I can't afford an expensive negative scanner, and read tips on making things to back-light the negatives during scanning on a regular cheap scanner. What I saw wasn't very impressive.
Maybe there's no cheap solution. I don't have to have museum quality files; just decent images. I'd appreciate your input, and thank you in advance for taking time to respond.
I recently inherited my Dad's collection of 616 negatives from the 40s, 50s and 60s. None were properly stored and I even found a few dozen on the dirt in the crawl space. I'd like to convert many of the negative to digital files, and was hoping for some tips on cleaning. I've read a lot about folks using rubbing alcohol and even kerosene. Some say regular drug store alcohol has too much water and that 98% alcohol is best. Some say never use water, others say use water and Dawn dish-washing soap. Some say don't try cleaning negative at all without being a pro. What would be a practical approach for me, with a few hundreg negatives that are probably no value to anyone else?
Next, I tried scanning on my cheap Epson scanner, but the results were dismal. I can't afford an expensive negative scanner, and read tips on making things to back-light the negatives during scanning on a regular cheap scanner. What I saw wasn't very impressive.
Maybe there's no cheap solution. I don't have to have museum quality files; just decent images. I'd appreciate your input, and thank you in advance for taking time to respond.