George Collier
Subscriber
I made my first black and white print in the summer of 1958, in Japan at 10 years old. I’ve been hooked on image transfer of all kinds ever since, with a career in graphic arts, scanning, digital archiving, and printing technologies, as well as my own black and white personal film / darkroom work.
I still have a darkroom, shoot 35mm, 120, and 4x5, though not as much 4x5 the last few years.
Realizing that at some point I may stop printing in the darkroom (like when we leave this house), I will probably still shoot film, then scan and print digitally. (I also have a Nikon DSLR)
I have an old Epson 4990, which I’ve used for all film formats and it’s decent, but it’s time to replace it. I’ve researched dedicated film scanners, and the Epson V850. I will need to scan opaque things, but not for serious work.
A general question - comparing a film scan between the V850 and dedicated film scanners of the same price range, scanning with no sharpening, or any other enhancement (I have Photoshop and am well versed with it), on both scanners, at the highest resolution and scaling that both scanners can do (producing the same size and resolution file), would I be sacrificing any quality with the V850? I have the impression that a dedicated scanner of the same value might produce higher quality, of some kind, since it doesn't have to scan opaque materials with a flat bed option. I won’t need any productivity features of the film scanner, such as auto scanning of a strip of negatives, only the quality is important. If I got a dedicated film scanner, a V600 would do the job for opaque scanning.
I still have a darkroom, shoot 35mm, 120, and 4x5, though not as much 4x5 the last few years.
Realizing that at some point I may stop printing in the darkroom (like when we leave this house), I will probably still shoot film, then scan and print digitally. (I also have a Nikon DSLR)
I have an old Epson 4990, which I’ve used for all film formats and it’s decent, but it’s time to replace it. I’ve researched dedicated film scanners, and the Epson V850. I will need to scan opaque things, but not for serious work.
A general question - comparing a film scan between the V850 and dedicated film scanners of the same price range, scanning with no sharpening, or any other enhancement (I have Photoshop and am well versed with it), on both scanners, at the highest resolution and scaling that both scanners can do (producing the same size and resolution file), would I be sacrificing any quality with the V850? I have the impression that a dedicated scanner of the same value might produce higher quality, of some kind, since it doesn't have to scan opaque materials with a flat bed option. I won’t need any productivity features of the film scanner, such as auto scanning of a strip of negatives, only the quality is important. If I got a dedicated film scanner, a V600 would do the job for opaque scanning.

