Hi Ed-- I scan Kodachrome with a Nikon 4000, and am running NIkonScan 3.x on MacOS X, so my experiences may or not help you, but here goes:
(1) I found that I get greater dynamic range and more accurate color by scanning with Nikon color management turned off, generating a raw scan, opening it in Photoshop, and APPLYING a custom profile I made using a Kodachrome IT8 target and the ICC Scan software from profilecity.com. (2) My understanding is that ICC/ICM profiles with small file sizes are usually contain only a few matrices, while the ones with large file sizes usually contain large lookup tables. The larger ones are more precise. See the comments Joseph Holmes makes about his Ektaspace profiles on his website, www.josephholmes.com. (3) I'm under the impression that you can usually convert profiles back and forth between ICC and ICM, but I don't know what's involved. I bet the info is somewhere on the web. (4) My impression, left over from some early fooling around with the profiles that came with my Nikon 4000, is that the Nikon profiles are special in some way and cannot be interchanged freely with other profiles. In particular, I think I remember trying to rename my custom Kodachrome profile with same name as Nikon's Kodachrome profile, and substituting the former for the latter, and it didn't work. Hope some of this turns out to be useful. --Bill At 10:25 AM -0700 4/21/04, Ed Lusby wrote: >I recently obtained the Nikon LS5000 scanner and began to try to obtain a >profile for Kodachrome scans. -- ====================================================================== Bill Fernandez * User Interface Architect * Bill Fernandez Design (505) 346-3080 * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://billfernandez.com ====================================================================== ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
