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Flat Bed Scanner or Camera
Tagged: scanners
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AuthorTopic: Flat Bed Scanner or Camera Read 1081 Times
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Computers & Displayson: July 13, 2019 at 9:02 am
I have a number of old photographs and my wife’s watercolor paintings that I would like to digitize. Most of this would not be printed except for the watercolors that someday I’d like to put in a book. My initial thought is to buy an affordable Epson flatbed scanner for ease and even lighting. If you were in my position would you scan or just photograph the pieces worth saving. Photographing art seems easy enough but I would have to make sure everything is aligned perfectly and spend more time fiddling with even lighting.
Re: Flat Bed Scanner or CameraReply #1 on: July 13, 2019 at 9:23 amThe difficulty with “affordable” or consumer level scanners is really more of a limitation in that the scanning bed is too small for a lot of artwork. It really is not too difficult to do photographic copy work if you have a basic understanding of photography and lighting. I have an old Epson V700, but I’d opt for the camera to do the copy work for artwork.
ken
Ken Doo www.carmelfineartprinting.com www.houseoflandscapes.com www.kendoophotography.com
Re: Flat Bed Scanner or CameraReply #2 on: August 8, 2019 at 9:24 pmHugh, I would be far more inclined to go with camera scans. Over time I’ve bookmarked articles about camera scanning:
<dl>
<dt>Camera Scans</dt>
<dd>pixl-latr is a Simple Holder and Diffuser for Digitizing Film</dd>
<dd>Using a DSLR to scan Negative film by Stefan Schmidt | STEVE HUFF PHOTOS</dd>
<dd>Neat DIY Projector Rig Lets You Digitize 15 Slides Per Minute Automatically</dd>
<dd>Camera Scanning | dpBestflow</dd>
<dd>Camera_Scanning_Krogh.pdf (application/pdf Object)</dd>
<dd>Reflecta’s Latest Film Scanner Can Digitize Your Negatives at an Insane 10,000 DPI</dd>
<dd>How to Scan 1500 Slides with your DSLR in a few Hours! | LensVid.comLensVid.com</dd>
<dd>How to Scan Your Film Using a Digital Camera and Macro Lens</dd>
<dd>CR thread: scanning 35mm negs with an SLR</dd>
<dd>How to Scan Your Film Using a Digital Camera and Macro Lens</dd>
<dd>Scanning thousands of slides? Try a digital camera</dd>
<dd>Camera Scanning – Publication-RF – CameraScanning.pdf</dd>
<dd>Scannerless Digital Capture and Processing of Negative Film Photographs – Luminous Landscape</dd>
<dd>Camera Scans vs Film Scanner</dd>
<dd>The $1,699 FilmToaster Helps You Digitize Most Film Formats with Your Digital Camera</dd>
<dd>The Definitive Guide to Scanning Film With a Digital Camera — Michael Fraser Photography</dd>
<dd>How I Built a Film-Digitizing Lightbox</dd>
</dl>
HTH-pw
Re: Flat Bed Scanner or CameraReply #3 on: August 21, 2019 at 3:00 pmI’ve just recently had experience with this. Helped a friend with creating a video slide show from old photos, ranging from 2×3″ to 8×10″ original photos in both monochrome and color.
Rather than scan them (I’m not a scanning pro and getting color balance correct, post scan, and handling surface textures of paper etc. is very challenging for me), I decided to just set them up and shoot them w/ my GFX 50s. I used a gray magnetic panel and magnet-thumbtacks to hold them flat and perpendicular to the camera. Lighting w/ Solux 4700k bulbs, and used polarizers to eliminate shine and appearance of surface texture. And, I shot them as 50mp jpegs using Fuji Astia simulation for the color, and Acros for the monochrome.
The resulting files were wonderful, right out of the camera, required very little tweaking in Lightroom. And several of them ended up being 11×14″ prints that looked surprisingly good, and much better than the originals. I’ve decided that for most quotidian type stuff that I “used to scan” … no longer. So much better, and very much easier and faster to just set them up and shoot ’em!
Rand
Rand Scott Adams Rand47
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This reply was modified 3 years, 9 months ago by
Rand Scott Adams.
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This reply was modified 3 years, 9 months ago by
Rand Scott Adams.
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This reply was modified 3 years, 9 months ago by
Rand Scott Adams.
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This reply was modified 3 years, 9 months ago by
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