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12th March 2015, 03:39 PM
#1
Slide scanning w/digital camera
A few months back I scanned some old family slides using this setup:
I used my D7000 and Micro 55mm lens. I know the setup looks crude but it was done on very tight budget and got some pretty good results IMO.
I was happy being able to get digital copies of the slides since they weren't accessible as slides per se.
My question to the collective here is, should I try to rescan them using my NEX 7 using the same lens/setup?
Would there be any advantage to it other than a larger file size when done? ie, does the 24meg Sony sensor offer an advantage over the 16meg Nikon?
Thanks for any comments.
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12th March 2015, 08:12 PM
#2
Re: Slide scanning w/digital camera
I wish I can have an answer for you as I have not done this kind of process before, but my response here will bump this message up the pecking order if that is any comfort to you...so others can read and respond appropriately.
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12th March 2015, 10:50 PM
#3
Re: Slide scanning w/digital camera
This is how I do it.
And using a scanner.
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13th March 2015, 04:43 AM
#4
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13th March 2015, 06:41 PM
#5
Re: Slide scanning w/digital camera
John....The view from your kitchen looks really good I reckon...
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13th March 2015, 09:27 PM
#6
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14th March 2015, 02:42 AM
#7
Re: Slide scanning w/digital camera
John, I tend to save everything, at least according to my wife, and that's a piece of black PVC sewer pipe I had left over from something else. It was the perfect size as a slide fit neatly inside the ID, and so did the lens. Kept all the light out except for that coming up thru the slide, and around it of course. Once I instituted using it the slides really came 'alive' so to speak. The white mylar film on the laptop screen diffuses the light some and hides the matrix of the screen which can be seen when looking thru the slide. All in all I was pretty pleased with the setup and how the lens worked out as it was new to me back then. Now I'm wondering if I should set it up all again using my Nex-7 instead. Guess I've nothing to loose by trying it. Maybe I'll surprise myself and get something out of it.
As far as using the laptop goes, I couldn't come up with any other 'bright' light source that was laying flat. Just using MS Paint to make a white surface didn't really work. It didn't 'shine' like a light. To make it 'shine' I thought, why not just take a picture of a light. The LED flashlight was close at hand so I tried it and it worked.
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