Peifer, William [OCDUS] wrote:

> Bruce Dayton wrote:
> > Those of you who scan 120 film - how do you do it?  Do you have
> > issues with film flatness?

> I'd be interested to find out as well what everyone's experience is
> with this.

 I use an Agfa Arcus 1200 which will scan anything.  I just can't get 
a sharp scan with it using the film holders.  I also have contrast 
problems on occasion; it mustn't have SMC optics.

 But for the price I can't really expect much.  Agfa has gotten out 
of the scanner business so there don't seem to be many options for 
medium/large format film scanners on a tight budget.

>  Haven't done any of this myself, and I was wondering if
> it's possible to simply sandwich the negative between thin glass
> plates.

 The Arcus 1200 can do that, but I haven't tried it.  I've had some 
slides scanned this way on a Duoscan T1200 (similar to the Arcus) and 
ended up with nasty newton rings which are impossible to remove from 
the file.  I do not recommend using glass plates or plastic sleeves 
or anything.

> I thought I'd try scanning
> 6x7 negatives by laying them directly on the bed of my cheap CanoScan
> D660U, then back-illuminate them either by setting a lightbox on top,
> or by reflecting the scanner's built-in front-illuminating light
> source with some sort of home-built adapter (kind of like the
> transparency adapters some of the flatbed scanners currently use).

 The transparency adaptor would be the best way to go but you may see 
newton rings.  A light box just doesn't throw off enough light for 
scanning.  I tried it once :)

Cheers,


- Dave

http://www.digistar.com/~dmann/ (out of date)
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