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 ...
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.
It’s a sad state of affairs when you open all your office draws, looking for a USB stick, and all you can find are old film negative cannisters. Anyone born before 1990 is guilty of this (and a whole ...
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 ...
Do you want to revive your old slides or 35mm negatives? Listen to this one-minute podcast to transfer those memories to your phone’s photo library.
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.