Shooting pictures on 35mm or medium format film is fun, and sometimes really challenging. And as any film photographer knows, actually getting your beautiful film shots onto your computer is not easy.
We’re going old-school with this week’s Tech 911 column—Lifehacker’s weekly Q&A where we solve your quirky technological issues. While plenty of people now use their smartphones as their default ...
I have an Epson 1200 Photo scanner with the transparancy attachment.<BR>I am using wIN2000. I find no place in the Epson Twain window to select negatives or slides, but only source options like color ...
As photography transitions from film to the digital realm, you face the task of scanning your negatives so you can incorporate them into the world of software-based photo editing, retouching and ...
Add the Epson Perfection 4180 Photo ($250 street) to the small but growing list of flatbed scanners that takes film scanning seriously. It's designed, in part, to scan not just 35-mm slides and film ...
I'll be in a class soon where I need to scan negatives. The school has some Kodak film scanner that supposively cost them around $1400 (but knowing schools it could probably be had for under $700), ...
If you’re willing to fork over more than $200 for a scanner — for breathing new life into tired, old photos or for scanning slides or negatives — you’re likely looking for the exceptional image ...
27 October 2004 EPSON has launched in the Middle East markets, the Perfection 2580 Photo, the first scanner to include Auto Film Loader features for digitising 35mm film, allowing filmstrips to be ...
06 December 2004 EPSON Middle East has launched the Perfection 2480 Photo providing outstanding features and high specification at an entry-level price. The new scanner will be the natural successor ...
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