Bill Burk
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In a recent thread at APUG, Ian Grant explained how he scans his negatives to build a catalog for darkroom printing.
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Ian hopes to reduce darkroom waste, by recognizing when a particular negative is not worth printing.
There are many benefits to gain from scanning the negatives in your collection.
Offered as cons are some aggregate problems: Ken Nadvornick gave a list among which he suggests with less print material being used in the darkroom, less will need to be made.
I've also expressed some personal cons. Insecurity. I am afraid, for instance, that auto levels in Photoshop will outperform my darkroom abilities. I am afraid that seeing a photograph on screen will sate my desire to see it in print.
Also a con, the short life of computer applications. I programmed a photograph filing system in Visual FoxPro, on a 386-40 computer running Windows 95. Because I hard-coded the display frames to fit within display limitations of the time, it looks funny when run today. Then I followed-up with Microsoft Expression Media, which has already ended its run.
Pros that were given:
Easy to find negatives when it comes time to print.
Discover worthwhile negatives you forgot about.
Easy to find best of a sequence.
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Ian hopes to reduce darkroom waste, by recognizing when a particular negative is not worth printing.
There are many benefits to gain from scanning the negatives in your collection.
Offered as cons are some aggregate problems: Ken Nadvornick gave a list among which he suggests with less print material being used in the darkroom, less will need to be made.
I've also expressed some personal cons. Insecurity. I am afraid, for instance, that auto levels in Photoshop will outperform my darkroom abilities. I am afraid that seeing a photograph on screen will sate my desire to see it in print.
Also a con, the short life of computer applications. I programmed a photograph filing system in Visual FoxPro, on a 386-40 computer running Windows 95. Because I hard-coded the display frames to fit within display limitations of the time, it looks funny when run today. Then I followed-up with Microsoft Expression Media, which has already ended its run.
Pros that were given:
Easy to find negatives when it comes time to print.
Discover worthwhile negatives you forgot about.
Easy to find best of a sequence.