michaelbsc
Member
I'm relatively new to the whole scanning/digital imaging world, so just point me in the right direction if this has been beaten into the ground and I'm just not searching in the right places.
I currently have a number of years experience with wet darkroom processing, all of it as a hobby rather than professionally.
A few years ago I bought a cheap Epson scanner from the Epson refurbish site, but I don't use it much. (So little I don't even remember the model number. A 44xx something.)
In a desire to start working with more alternate processes I see some significant advantages to the hybrid work flow that folks here use, so I'm interested in getting into this.
My current scanner is only capable of 135 and 120 size film, not 4x5. At least not in transmission mode. I have thrown a couple of 4x5s onto the glass and they do scan.
My interest is taking work I already have plus new images, and converting that into materials for printing in new mediums like carbon prints or bromoils.
My wife, however, is interested in jumping full bore into the digital work flow. The whole nine yards of it; scanning, retouching, and printing for presentation all in bits and bytes.
Our negative collection, and our cameras for future negatives, span everything from 110 (16mm) to 8x10. (But I expect the 5x7 and 8x10 may not be economically scannable. Tell me I'm wrong about that and make my day. I can't optically enlarge anything bigger than a 4x5 negative, so getting a 5x7 turned into an 11x14 would make me very happy.)
In the near future my wife will be acquiring a pretty fully tricked out Mac workstation, everything from a wheelbarrow full of ram and OMG cores to big disk packs. I want to piggy back on this to get a scanner, printer, and image software that will satisfy both her desire to make presentation quality work and supply me with materials for use in more traditional chemical printing practices.
But I'm not much of a Mac guy, nor do I really have a good feel for the scanner/printer/software availability. In my youth I was accused of being a Unix bigot more than once by the DOS weenies, so the Mac itself isn't an issue for me. But what's out there, and what are the pluses and minuses for them, for the imaging hardware and software? I distrust the magazine reviews, since their job is to sell advertisement. I want advice from someone who actually uses the stuff.
While I don't want to say that cost is no object, I'm not looking for the Wal-mart solution here. Aside from the computer and monitors which are already budgeted I'm willing to budget several thousand dollars extra for this.
I currently have a number of years experience with wet darkroom processing, all of it as a hobby rather than professionally.
A few years ago I bought a cheap Epson scanner from the Epson refurbish site, but I don't use it much. (So little I don't even remember the model number. A 44xx something.)
In a desire to start working with more alternate processes I see some significant advantages to the hybrid work flow that folks here use, so I'm interested in getting into this.
My current scanner is only capable of 135 and 120 size film, not 4x5. At least not in transmission mode. I have thrown a couple of 4x5s onto the glass and they do scan.
My interest is taking work I already have plus new images, and converting that into materials for printing in new mediums like carbon prints or bromoils.
My wife, however, is interested in jumping full bore into the digital work flow. The whole nine yards of it; scanning, retouching, and printing for presentation all in bits and bytes.
Our negative collection, and our cameras for future negatives, span everything from 110 (16mm) to 8x10. (But I expect the 5x7 and 8x10 may not be economically scannable. Tell me I'm wrong about that and make my day. I can't optically enlarge anything bigger than a 4x5 negative, so getting a 5x7 turned into an 11x14 would make me very happy.)
In the near future my wife will be acquiring a pretty fully tricked out Mac workstation, everything from a wheelbarrow full of ram and OMG cores to big disk packs. I want to piggy back on this to get a scanner, printer, and image software that will satisfy both her desire to make presentation quality work and supply me with materials for use in more traditional chemical printing practices.
But I'm not much of a Mac guy, nor do I really have a good feel for the scanner/printer/software availability. In my youth I was accused of being a Unix bigot more than once by the DOS weenies, so the Mac itself isn't an issue for me. But what's out there, and what are the pluses and minuses for them, for the imaging hardware and software? I distrust the magazine reviews, since their job is to sell advertisement. I want advice from someone who actually uses the stuff.
While I don't want to say that cost is no object, I'm not looking for the Wal-mart solution here. Aside from the computer and monitors which are already budgeted I'm willing to budget several thousand dollars extra for this.
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