winger
Subscriber
I use a Mac and just updated to Big Sur. I may update to the latest soon as well (mostly to keep the security updated). The problem with this is that I have an Epson Perfection 4870 Photo. I bought it in 2004 and it's scanned at least 50,000 files (mostly photography-related, but not exclusively). I can't imagine it will last too much longer - in technology terms, it's ancient. After the update, EpsonScan cannot be made to work. At the age of the scanner, I don't want to buy software to make it work well. I might be able to scan from within Elements or Photos, but I haven't tried.
Should I bite the bullet and buy a V850? Should I use my dSLR on my portatrace light panel for web use and send good ones out for drum scans? How many images would it take for drum scanning to cost as much as buying the 850? Yes, I know drum scanning is far better, but I don't usually get huge prints made anyway. I shoot more 120 and 4x5 than 35mm, but could need to scan pretty much any size.
My main uses for scans are to post things on Instagram and to submit images for juried shows. I occasionally get prints made from scans, but only from color film which I don't shoot that often. The toughest thing for me right now is getting a good file from a fiber print - I can't make them flat enough to photograph them.
Any advice from others with similar usage?
Should I bite the bullet and buy a V850? Should I use my dSLR on my portatrace light panel for web use and send good ones out for drum scans? How many images would it take for drum scanning to cost as much as buying the 850? Yes, I know drum scanning is far better, but I don't usually get huge prints made anyway. I shoot more 120 and 4x5 than 35mm, but could need to scan pretty much any size.
My main uses for scans are to post things on Instagram and to submit images for juried shows. I occasionally get prints made from scans, but only from color film which I don't shoot that often. The toughest thing for me right now is getting a good file from a fiber print - I can't make them flat enough to photograph them.
Any advice from others with similar usage?