This tutorial - especially the part about not doing the white balance if scanning at 2.2 gamma (and editing on the color positive copy) made suuuuuch a huge difference in my results. Thank you!!!! 💛
If I remember correctly the biggest thing to look into is the optical resolution. Search this up in some photography forums and they will have a deep breakdown on the scanners and optimal settings
"I find that a little bit of dust and scratches definitely adds the uniqueness of film, Film is definitely not meant to be a perfect format" "So having these little imperfections is nice and adds a nice ecstatic." Wait, whattttttt? Hold up, were you listening to what you were saying? I am so sorry but this is unacceptable and irresponsible e to be said by a UA-camr that influences so many viewers. Photographers used to shoot on film only, and there are many other professional photographers that shot film then and now to make a living including me. Dust and scratches are mistakes, if you were talking about old family photos with dust and scratches, that is a storeage problem, not an add-on ecstatic. Film shots can be perfect, and the commercial shots you saw growing up as a kid were all film. Come on, with all these subscribers, I bet you can do better than saying those at the beginning of a tutorial video.
It’s not that serious haha. It’s a home scan. For professional work and publications it should be drumscanned. But for general scans at home dust and imperfections are fine. Not worth spending hours getting dust out of shots that aren’t going to be large prints or viewed by many
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Thanks for being one of the few creators that have the NEW V850 software.
This tutorial - especially the part about not doing the white balance if scanning at 2.2 gamma (and editing on the color positive copy) made suuuuuch a huge difference in my results. Thank you!!!! 💛
Happy to have helped!
Excellent info - I have tons of old film I need to do something with.
Thank you so much! Hope you can get to scanning!
Thank you very much for this video! It was very usefull for me!
Glad it was helpful!
excellent tutorial
Thank you!
Great video. Do you know what is difference between this and v600 when it comes to resolution?
If I remember correctly the biggest thing to look into is the optical resolution. Search this up in some photography forums and they will have a deep breakdown on the scanners and optimal settings
Do the glass film holders cause chromatic abberation?
Not a noticeable amount
In Which way you put the film the glossy part way down?!
How much megapixle was that scanned picture in 4800 dpi for 35mm
Give a size
Im not sure the exact size but its a rather large file!
Nice video 👌🏻 where’s the Glass scanning with film borders?
I will have a DSLR scan video soon!
@@KylerSteele where you bought that film holder?
Curious about the glass to use for scanning with the borders. Can't find the link :)
The person selling the glass no longer appears to do so :(
Hey Kyler, where can I purchase those glasses for scanning?
I think this is the link www.betterscanning.com/scanning/insert.html
Can you help me? My film keeps coming out horrible and I can't figure out what I am doing wrong.
Check the negative and make sure that it is properly exposed
why dies my epson scan 2 not have Digital ice?
Maybe update the software if you dont see it!
"I find that a little bit of dust and scratches definitely adds the uniqueness of film, Film is definitely not meant to be a perfect format"
"So having these little imperfections is nice and adds a nice ecstatic."
Wait, whattttttt? Hold up, were you listening to what you were saying?
I am so sorry but this is unacceptable and irresponsible e to be said by a UA-camr that influences so many viewers.
Photographers used to shoot on film only, and there are many other professional photographers that shot film then and now to make a living including me.
Dust and scratches are mistakes, if you were talking about old family photos with dust and scratches, that is a storeage problem, not an add-on ecstatic.
Film shots can be perfect, and the commercial shots you saw growing up as a kid were all film.
Come on, with all these subscribers, I bet you can do better than saying those at the beginning of a tutorial video.
It’s not that serious haha. It’s a home scan. For professional work and publications it should be drumscanned. But for general scans at home dust and imperfections are fine. Not worth spending hours getting dust out of shots that aren’t going to be large prints or viewed by many