It looks like a very worthwhile service, Tina.
I like this shot, although the sepia is unnoticeable.
The result is a little soft: are you scanning the print or the negative?
Chris
On 2 Sep 2013, at 22:48, Tina Manley <images@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I haven't finished editing the Guatemalan market photos yet, but the
> scanning goes on. I'm now scanning black and white, TMax, from Guatemalan
> Medical clinics: 61840
>
> After several years of conducting medical clinics with doctors,
> optometrists, dentists, nurses all from the USA, the Guatemalan community
> leaders requested help with training their own health promoters. Using the
> book Where There Is No Doctor, we held workshops for all of the health
> promoters from rural villages. During the first two days they would learn
> to take blood pressures, temperatures, vital signs, etc. and practiced on
> each other. For the rest of the week, they would assist the doctors in
> actual clinics.
>
> This photo is in the actual clinic:
>
> http://www.pbase.com/image/152147804
>
> When I used Camera Raw to set the white balance, it automatically converted
> the RGB scan to sepia. I kind of like the warm look. How do you feel
> about sepia vs straight B&W?
--
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