snaggs said:
It all seems kind of daunting, I love shooting film, and a friend gave me his enlargers etc... I just dont know what to do with them and how to set them up in a normal house.
Or given I have a large format printer (24"), should I just not bother?
Daniel.
You know, here's how it went for me. I was frustrated with every new digital camera I bought - it just didn't work like my film cameras. Press the shutter, wait 3/4 second, or more, finally the shutter triggers. All to a lovely fake shutter sound. Frustrating, and I felt so, well, dumb.
So I went back to my film cameras - a Wista 4x5, a Mamiya 6mf, a Nikon n70, and an old olympus 35RD. I felt back in control.
Then came the realization that I had a nice photo printer - a high end HP model that would print nice, archival prints (up to 8.5x11). All I needed was a scanner. Bought the scanner.
Started scanning and printing. Realized that the Photoshop elements software that came with the scanner, and the scanner driver software itself, sucked. Bought Photoshop (full blown one, with the full blown price). Bought Vuescan to drive the scanner.
Realized with all this, scanning and photoshopping is boring, wearing on my patience and my carpal tunnels. And no matter how hard I try, the results coming off the scanner from the negatives and slides just, well, suck, compared to the negative and slides themselves.
Realized I needed to invest in a real scanner, like an Imacon or drum scanner, rather than my flatbed scanner, if I wanted those eye popping scans. And, by the way, my B&W prints look *terrible* on the inkjet. I need one that prints real black, without metamerism. And that can print 11x14, or 16x20. DIDN'T BUY THE SCANNER OR THE PRINTER. Instead, bought an enlarger, built a darkroom. Prints scan really nice on a cheap flatbed if I need to upload to APUG...
Ahhhhhhh.....