Author Topic: Cheap Film Scanner  (Read 1218 times)

Offline malc

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Cheap Film Scanner
« on: August 13, 2009, 02:17:45 PM »
A cheap scanner for archiving old snaps for on screen viewing was desperately needed sooooo.....

I caught a youtube video where somebody created a "scanner" from a lamp, paper, digital SLR etc.  However this method creates a few problems especially with transmitted light through the paper for a diffused light source which highlights the grain of the paper. Also the glass used to hold the negatives  highlights any dust.

Try this method:

1. Place a piece of white paper where the sun can illuminate it, this creates a very bright even light source. I did this at my french windows.
2. Place two equal height supports either side, make sure the supports do not reflect any light nor shade the paper.
3. Get hold of a film scanner negative holder (I had one from a very old SCSI scanner, now unuseable) and place this on top of the supports.
4. Get a box which is large enough to envelop your camera to make into a tube.  Ideally the length of this tube should match the minimum focus distance of your camera.
5. Place the tube on top of the negative holder with image to be scanned off centre (I'm assuming most SLR's have the lens off centre like mine).  The off centre placing is necessary to avoid distortion as you automatically tend to centre the camera at the edge of the tube, especially when your hands are in contact with the edges.
6. Photograph the negative.
7. Load the picture into Gimp and:
    a) Use Tools > Transform Tools > Rotate , to align the image, you can use the edge of the rotate dialog to get this done accurately.
    b) Use the rectangle select tool to select the negative area.
    c) Edit > Cut
    d) Edit > Paste as new image
    e) Optionally rotate for landscape/portrait etc with the quick option : Image > Transform
    f) Colours > Invert
    g) Colours > Auto > White Balance
    h) Optionally colours > colour balance. My images tend to be a little blue/cyan so I increase the red and yellow hues.
   
Despite not having a macro lens on my 6Mb SLR I can get a decent 1.5Mb image using this method.

It's FAST ...... VERY FAST! It takes less than 5 minutes to scan a 24 image reel of film.  You can then do all the GIMP stuff when the sun sets with a glass of red wine to help ;-)

A note about camera settings. The pictures must be clear so the usual settings are needed, namely : as low an ISO setting as possible, a minumum shutter speed of 1/125 (unless you use a tripod). I set my camera for programmed mode with a fixed ISO of 200. This worked fine even when the sun went behind the inevitable scottish clouds!

regards,

Malcolm
My Film scanner:

Offline MGBguy

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Re: Cheap Film Scanner
« Reply #1 on: August 23, 2009, 02:09:27 PM »
Since no one has replied to this post...I gotta say that I'm impressed! Being an old 35mm film/slide shooter (Canon AT-1, Canon AE-1) I admire the ingenuity.

I opted for a Canon CanoScan 8400F scanner...still on Windows XP Pro with Photoshop Elements. Very slow...but one of the few reasons why I still have a Windows machine. I vow to digitize the entire family photo collection before my demise.  ::)

Forget about sasquatch and extraterrestrials, it's those gul darn leprechauns we should be concerned about!

KarlM

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Re: Cheap Film Scanner
« Reply #2 on: August 23, 2009, 05:12:48 PM »
If VueScan from http://hamrick.com/ will run your Canon CanoScan 8400F scanner it has a Linux version that works well on PCLinuxOS. Free trial (with watermark) that never expires.  If you bought it years ago for Win you can use the old license number to keep using it with the Linux version.

Offline j-retired

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Re: Cheap Film Scanner
« Reply #3 on: August 23, 2009, 05:17:21 PM »
I like it!!!  I have used a camera as a copier often when I have had many sheets to copy - immensely quicker - but I never thought of extending it to negatives!  Nice one.

j