"crooked" and "warp" slides? Paul what on earth are you doing with criminal and crazy slides? But in all seriousness, if they are as bad as described, I do not see the concern about loss of quality and newtonian rings that might result from putting them in glass slide mounts since they probably have already lost detail and information. I would think the idea would be to try and salvage what one could from them. At any rate, I am going to make an off handed recommendation, which may or may not e worth the time and effort or even be possible. Why not scan them in using a sheet of anti-newtonian glass on top of them at the same size and at as high a resolution as you can with a flatbed scanner; once you have them digitalized and even tweaked in Photoshop, print them out via film recorder to new 35mm slides or even 6x7cm transparencies, if you would like to archive the saved images on film as well as digitallly? I realize that the resolutions even with upsampling will not be all that great as to allow large enlargements; but I doubt that the quality of the originqals are not good enough to serve as a basis for getting something better at a large enlargemetn even if you were drum scanning them.
----Original Message---- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Paul D. DeRocco Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2004 12:35 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [filmscanners] RE: Better DOF than Nikon? >> From: Arthur Entlich >> >> Paul sent me a couple of his "cooked" slides to test with a few >> scanner for him. I too thought these could by flattened by all the >> usual methods, such as those you state below, until I saw them! >> Warped is a kind word. These mounts are charcoal broiled, and the >> base layer of the film frames is literally melted. There is no >> method that would truly flatten these other than perhaps two well >> clamped down pieces of thick glass. >> >> They are painful to look at! > > Heh, heh. I told you they were warped. Of course, I sent you some > particularly bad ones. I have slides that cover the gamut from really > bad, down to only slightly curved. > > Some of them had mounts that were so charred that I had to remount > them. They were sitting in metal Logan boxes, and the slides in the > top box were totally destroyed, as were the ones near the front and > back of the other boxes. > > So are they hopelessly out of focus on your equipment, or can you > manage to coax more sharpness out of them than an LS-2000? --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.559 / Virus Database: 351 - Release Date: 1/7/2004 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
