Not all flatbed scanners are capable of scanning slides and negatives
Those are not reflective scans their transilluminated. So the lid of
your flatbed scanner has to have a light source in it
Now if you do have a flat bed scanner capable I've doing this for you..
You could put your negatives on there and do a preview and you'd be
able to see the preview much better than with the naked eye
You do not need to do a full scan to do evaluations
The bonus for you is that if you like one of the previews you can
immediately flag it for scan while it's still sitting on on your flat
bed
On 9/29/21, 4:36 PM Bob Benson <bob.benson91@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I'm about to look through several thousand negatives (all OM, so
on-topic).
Question: I have limited ability to look at a negative and see
what's
there,(and judge for follow-on processing.) it's the 'negativity"
aspect
(don't have the problem with slides.) WIth a flatbed scanner, of
course,
I could scan many at a time, but it does take quite a bit of time.
My question: does anyone have experience with a very low resolution
scanner (presumably it would scan a group of negatives quickly) that
would
speed my review process?
Bob
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