you can but slides are more asking from your scanner than negatives.
A cheap scanner is more appropriate for negatives
Also i think that your not taking enought time to learn really how to
use your software.
Dont be impatient , i can promise you that you can get better prints
from it than from your lab
unless it is a very expensive one !
yves
Le 25 mai 04, à 14:52, jking@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx a écrit :
>
>>
>> I dont know which software you are using but probably 1 and 3 are
>> right
>> (the scanner is correctly seeing and : let it set the exposure)
>> among the 3 alternatives in first point 1 and 2 are the most probable.
>> try to look at your negatives instead of your prints to chek that
>> point.
>> my personal advice (since i do the same work with an unexpensive
>> scanner Dual II ) would be to use Vuescan software which i find best
>> for color negatives
>
> The alternative software was vuescan.
> I find it quite difficult to look at negatives and evaluate their
> exposure. I think I might shoot a roll of slide film and see what I
> get.
>
>
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