Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/08/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Peter, Thank you very much for your kind details. I?ve never tested PWP, but I think my problems is not the software, IMHO with Capture One 7Pro, Vuescan Pro and PS I shall have enough options. IMHO the problem is that film quality has been changed and adjust the development to this. When I?m scanning old films it work, when I scann Ilford HP5 it works almost perfect, because this film has been practically unchanged and Tri-X and others yes. I?m agree about the limitations of Capture One removing the dust spots, I scann everything at 16 bit Tiff. Thank you very much again!!! Cheers Lluis El 03/08/2014, a las 22:45, Peter Klein <pklein at threshinc.com> escribi?: > Hi, Lluis! I agree that the V7000/LR5 is best. > > I've used a Canon FS-4000 scanner for years. The supplied Canon software > made high contrast scans much like your first example. This was "baked in" > and couldn't be undone. So I switched to VueScan. > > After scanning, I adjust and dust-spot the images in Picture Window Pro > (PWP). I have two methods: > > For pictures that will be printed or I want maximum detail/quality, I scan > to 16-bit TIF files using maximum resolution and lowest contrast (making > sure that the extremes of highlight and shadow are within the curve). Then > I do my adjustments in PWP. If the picture is very contrasty, I turn on > the feature that does two passes with the scanner, one exposure for > highlights and one for shadows. Only some scanners support this, I don't > know if your Plustek does. > > For old family pictures that will be only viewed on-screen or don't have > much resolution to begin with, I scan to JPG. I have some settings that > work well most of the time. They get the picture right, or almost right. I > do only a little adjustment in PWP, and it's done. > > Part of your problem may be that scanning film is very different from > "scanning" real life with a digital camera. In one case the sensor is > getting light reflected from reality. In the other, it's getting light > transmitted through the film, which has changed the contrast range of the > original scene. So the Raw software may be getting a very different > contrast range than it was designed for, and the default settings are way > off. > > I thought about trying to use Capture One with my film scans. The VueScan > version I have doesn't create DNG files, and I haven't upgraded yet. The > other issue is that Capture One can remove little spots of dust, but to > remove longer "threads," regular image editing software with a clone tool > is better. > > --Peter > > > Thank to all of you my friends for your opinions, I think too that the > > V7000 > > and LR5 processing is better, I would like do some more test with V700 > > and > > Vuescan because with it I can do DNG files. I?m also surprised seeing > > such > > differences in scanning quality, I have also tested with Silverfast but > > not > > showed in my opinion the two I?ve show was the best. > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information