Photographer Claus Thiim has come up with a virtually free way to scan hundreds of old negatives and slides. Best of all, it is easy and fast to make and use. Even if you never touched a film camera, ...
Film and negative scanners are expensive. DIY options are sometimes complicated. This option only costs you only the price of a piece of A4 silver card stock and the time it'll take to fold it. The ...
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 ...
If you're using a Hewlett-Packard Scanjet flatbed scanner with a Transparent Materials Adapter, you can scan 35mm slides and negatives using the TMA attachment. Because light travels through slides ...
Until now, if you wanted to step up from desktop scanners to professional film negative scanning, you needed to be willing to drop a pretty penny. That’s why these hackers bolted together their own ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Gizmodo may earn an affiliate commission. Reading time 1 minute We ...
Shooting a roll of analog film and developing negatives can be an enjoyable experience. However, scanning those negatives to create digital files is often slow, cumbersome, and requires heavy ...
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 ...
Big brother to the Kodak P460 Personal Photo Scanner ($109.99 direct, 3.5 stars) and Kodak P461 Personal Photo Scanner ($139.99 direct, 3.5 stars), the Kodak P811BK Personal Photo & Negative Scanner ...