![]() ![]() I’ve used a Canoscan 9000F for nearly a decade, and it’s great. Luckily, flatbed scanners are relatively cheap and plentiful, at least compared to 35mm/medium format film scanners. The glossy surface of the image causes reflections, the camera lens introduces distortion, and the lossy jpeg compression never looks great. ![]() However, it comes as no surprise that this isn’t the most high quality method. ![]() The easiest, and most common way to digitize a Polaroid or Fuji Instax frame is to simply place it on a table and take a picture of it with your phone. One of the great pleasures of shooting instant film is having a physical picture in your hand, but if you want to share that picture on that great place we call the internet, you’re going to have to convert it into digital ones and zeros. Who knows, by the time you’re reading this, the Epson app will be broken by a Windows update and macOS will be working again – that’s the fun of drivers and software. All of the settings I outline below still apply to the Epson scanning app. Surprisingly, it works great, and the colors that come from the app are far more saturated and true-to-life looking than macOS’s default flat profile. It’s a bit of kludgy work-around, so I’ve recently started using Epson Scan on Windows 10. May 2021 Update: MacOS has recently broken capability with the V600 with the image capture app, but you can still force the scanner to work by going into settings, choosing printers/scanners, and working from there. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |