My mom has gobs of pictures that she took when I was a kid. The original prints are starting to get yellow as the years go by, but she has all the negatives. If you or someone you know has lots of ...
Here’s why we count on you readers to help us out. Maybe you remember Steve? He had stacks of 35mm negatives to scan, so he asked us to recommend a scanner. Judging by our e-mail responses, this is a ...
My parents have got shoeboxes full of envelopes of old, mostly 3x5 35mm prints and their original negatives. I'd like to digitize these, and I'm also contemplating playing around with their old Pentax ...
The Kodak P461 Personal Photo Scanner ($139.99 direct) is both literally and metaphorically an extended version of the Kodak P460 Personal Photo Scanner ($109.99 direct, 3.5 stars) that I recently ...
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.
Wolverine Data, Inc. has introduced a new and innovative standalone film scanner that instantly converts 35mm film negatives and slides into digital images without the need for a computer or ...
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, ...
What are my options? I have been reading up on the Epson v500 to v700 models. They seem to do the jobs well. My local lab offers digital scan 36 exposures but would only output the file to 300 pixel.
I needed a scanner to copy some black and white glass plate negatives and I found that Epson do a couple of scanners in their Perfection range that have negative (and slide) scanning facilities built ...
Most scanners from Kodak are aimed at offices that need to scan documents, but a few— including the Kodak P460 Personal Photo Scanner ($109.99 direct)—are for consumer-level casual photographers who ...