Thanks, Tom! I had been wondering why the wood screws were taking me so
long to drive in. Thought I had it solved when I decided that the
pointy end should go in first. ;-))
(having a giddy moment)

Jack

--- Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Common sense point... :-) ... I only once considered scanning 35 film
> with a
> flat bed scanner.  It was a high-end (for the time) HP something or
> the
> other.  I looked at what the add on attachment cost vs. the price of
> a
> dedicated film scanner which was something like $100 for the
> attachment vs.
> $350 for the dedicated film scanner.  The choice was obvious based on
> the
> value I was getting and film scanners were a pretty nifty item.
> 
> There's the right tool for every job and using an all-purpose
> flat-bed
> scanner that was not really designed to scan film as a film scanner
> is not
> using the right tool for the job, as anecdotal evidence bears out. If
> that's
> all one has, then OK, but in a general discussion about film
> scanning, any
> talk about how bad or hard your experience was, is sort of missing
> the
> point.
> 
> It's like telling how hard it is to pound in a woodscrew with a tack
> hammer.
> Certainly one can probably accomplish it, but it's not representative
> of how
> to drive in a screw. 
> 
> 
> Tom C.
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of
> Scott
> > Loveless
> > Sent: Friday, November 09, 2007 8:57 AM
> > To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> > Subject: Re: Shooting film (Velvia)
> > 
> > Adam Maas wrote:
> > > Velvia and Kodachrome are too high contrast to get good scans on
> low-end
> > > flatbed scanners and older mid/high-end flatbeds. The scanners
> simply
> > > don't have the DMax to handle these emulsions.
> > 
> > I'll agree with that.  I've never shot Velvia, but Kodachrome is
> nearly
> > impossible to scan with a low-end flatbed.  If the photo doesn't
> have
> > dense shadows I can get a scan suitable for web viewing.  That's
> about
> > as good as it gets.  Astia, Provia and E100 are much more
> forgiving.
> > 
> > --
> > Scott Loveless
> > http://www.twosixteen.com/fivetoedsloth/
> > 
> > --
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