Rinthe
Member
So I'm hearing I should scan in RBG 16bit, then desaturated it in photoshop? Do i get better scans that way than using grayscale?
Color negs and transparencies are better scanned as RGB, then converted to b&w in Photoshop. This will give you a *lot* more control over image contrast and how tones are rendered. Just desaturating will usually not provide the best result. There are a lot of strategies for converting -- this is a whole otherSo I'm hearing I should scan in RBG 16bit, then desaturated it in photoshop? Do i get better scans that way than using grayscale?
I'd like to know how scanner noise behaves if you compare an RGB scan (converted to B&W afterwards) with a gray scale scan (straight from the scanner). With an RGB scan you basically take three samples of every pixel, which, if you average them, should reduce noise by a factor of 1.73. This may, of course, be a moot point, if the scanner internally does grey scale scans like this anyway.I scan b&w negatives as 16-bit grayscale. Photoshop tells me that all the channels of b&w negs scanned as 48-bit RGB have identical histograms, so I don't think there is anything to be gained (except file size) by scanning these as RGB.
I scan b&w negatives as 16-bit grayscale. Photoshop tells me that all the channels of b&w negs scanned as 48-bit RGB have identical histograms, so I don't think there is anything to be gained (except file size) by scanning these as RGB.
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