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Which scanner for 4x5?

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Chan Tran

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I am thinking of shooting 4x5 color negative. Which is a good scanner for reasonable amount of money? Camera scanning won't do as I will have to have very high res camera to justify 4x5. I have the Konica Minolta Dimage IV wihich is good for 35mm but not for anything larger.
 
I am thinking of shooting 4x5 color negative. Which is a good scanner for reasonable amount of money? Camera scanning won't do as I will have to have very high res camera to justify 4x5. I have the Konica Minolta Dimage IV wihich is good for 35mm but not for anything larger.

I've seen some incredible 4x5 scans done via wet mounting on a humble Epson V750.

At those negative sizes, many of the downsides of consumer flatbed negative scanning tend to fade away, unless the operator is unexperienced or the device is not operating according to spec. The latter is VERY common with used Epson flatbeds which get shipped around with no transport lock engaged and end up misaligned. So if you go down this route get a new unit or one you trust it hasn't been moved around a lot.
 
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Camera scanning won't do as I will have to have very high res camera to justify 4x5.

Not if you "scan" segments and "stitch" them together. I'd find that annoying, but you can get very high resolution from a modest digital camera.

I use an Epson Perfection 3200 - which is over 20-years-old, now.
 
I've seen some incredible 4x5 scans done via wet mounting on a humble Epson V750.

I upgraded from an Epson V600 to an Epson V850 when I started shooting 4x5s.

Ditto; The V8** series has a dedicated 4x5 single-sheet holder for dry scanning. For best results get the wet mount, some mylar sheets, and a bottle of Gamsol.
 
I heard that the Epson software doesn't work with current OS like Windows 10 or 11 is that true? I have no problem getting the color right using the Konica Minolta software but I don't have much luck with Vuescan.
 
Not if you "scan" segments and "stitch" them together. I'd find that annoying, but you can get very high resolution from a modest digital camera.

I use an Epson Perfection 3200 - which is over 20-years-old, now.
If you stitch in Photoshop how would you do it? Although I did fine with panorama but when I tried to scan a large technical drawing in sections then stitched I couldn't line it up correctly. The software tried to line it up but ended up distort the drawing.
 
If you stitch in Photoshop how would you do it?

No idea - I don't use Photoshop. Last I tried to stitch photos together was with some photostitch thing built into Windows (not sure if it's still there) .... or maybe it was Canon software? Anyway, there must be something automated to do it.
 
I am thinking of shooting 4x5 color negative. Which is a good scanner for reasonable amount of money? Camera scanning won't do as I will have to have very high res camera to justify 4x5. I have the Konica Minolta Dimage IV wihich is good for 35mm but not for anything larger.

depends a bit on your budget, how much you're planning to scan, and the resolution requirements...

for color negative, personally I'd recommend an Epson V850 with Silverfast (that's what I used for a long time).
that will allow for prints up to 30"/80cm wide, has infrared dust reduction, and rather good color negative rendering.

camera scanning is also an option if you do stitching, but it takes quite a bit more effort, color inversion is very challenging and dust rather time consuming to retouch.
 
I figure for 4x5 a resolution of 2400dpi is plenty as it would give an image of more than 100MP. So scanner resolution doesn't need to be very high.
 
I heard that the Epson software doesn't work with current OS like Windows 10 or 11 is that true?

I use a 20-year old Epson 4990 with Epson software on Win10. So no, it's not true. Likewise, the EpsonScan versions for the v600-700-800 series will also work fine on Win10 etc.

I figure for 4x5 a resolution of 2400dpi is plenty

Good flatbed scanners top out at around 2000-2400dpi, even if they tout higher resolutions. As you observed, that's plenty in the real world.
 
Ditto; The V8** series has a dedicated 4x5 single-sheet holder for dry scanning. For best results get the wet mount, some mylar sheets, and a bottle of Gamsol.

I've never tried it but I'm curious. Scans of glass-mounted film use the second more inferior lens as opposed to the better lens used for film in their holders. Have you compared scans of the same shot and what have you found?
 
I heard that the Epson software doesn't work with current OS like Windows 10 or 11 is that true? I have no problem getting the color right using the Konica Minolta software but I don't have much luck with Vuescan.

I'm running Windows 11 64 bit with no problem with the V850 Epsonscan program.
 
Although I contact print most of my 4x5 negatives in platinum/palladium I do enlarge some and scan some with an Epson V850 and Silverfast Studio Ai8. Here's an unedited example except turned to be horizontal. size 30x37 and section is 9x8.5. Ilford HP5 in ID11


fish-head-2.jpg
section.jpg



 
I figure for 4x5 a resolution of 2400dpi is plenty as it would give an image of more than 100MP. So scanner resolution doesn't need to be very high.

That's what I use for my V850 and former V600. Beyond 2400 really doesn't give more resolution.

I did a comparison of the V850 with a Howtek HiResolve 8000 drum scanner. The results for the Epson were very favorable.
 
I have been using Epson V700 for scanning 4x5 over many years, and it is more than adequate.

- Yes 2400 dpi is plenty for 4x5
- Epson Scan software works well on Windows 10 and 11. I use it in Professional mode. I experimented with VueScan and SilverFast, but still like Epson Scan software most.
- V700 comes with a negative holders for 2 sheets of 4x5, dry scanning. Once my film dry flat, the holders can keep them flat for scanning. I never bothered with wet scanning.
 
I have been using Epson V700 for scanning 4x5 over many years, and it is more than adequate.

- Yes 2400 dpi is plenty for 4x5
- Epson Scan software works well on Windows 10 and 11. I use it in Professional mode. I experimented with VueScan and SilverFast, but still like Epson Scan software most.
- V700 comes with a negative holders for 2 sheets of 4x5, dry scanning. Once my film dry flat, the holders can keep them flat for scanning. I never bothered with wet scanning.

Ditto. I mostly shoot B&W and do all wet, but when I am doing color I shoot 4x5 E-6 and scan on an Epson V700 which I have had for years and have never found the scans to fall short.
 
I've used my Epson V700 in the past and got some very nice 4x5 scans but nowadays I have a suitable camera that does even better. However if price (or the fact you don't want a digital camera and additional paraphernalia) is a concern the Epson route is pretty fool proof and you don't need any extra software, Epson Scan is fine for the task.
 
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