Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

Hi!
I have decided to scan my 35-mm printed photos to my computer, and then
get rid of the printed ones. For that sake, I have bought a new Canon
4200F scanner. In the bundled software, I can scan up to 3200 DPI
(optical). I have several questions:
1. In order to get the best quality; is it better to use the negatives
instead of the printed pictures? It takes much longer.
2. What is the preferred scanning resolution? (Keeping in mind that
some time ahead I would be willing to print these images)
3. In what file format (e.g. JPG) is it preferable to store the images?
3. Would you consider Canon 4200F sufficient for archival proposes, or
should I spend more money on a more professional one?
4. The scanner is bundled with Arcview Photostudio 5.5. I feel this
software is rather cumbersome to use and am ready to spend on a
professional and convenient software package. My budget is around $500,
can you recommend any?
Thanks a lot in advance!
A.

Amitstei@gmail.com


Re: Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

Prints are usually pretty poor quality, even the best are no match for the
negative or slide. Most prints are barely as good as a magazine...
You need special software such as FARE or something, not sure of the name now!
It came with my Canon 5000f scanner. It scans the negative a few times in
different light and can remove the dust in software, since dust reacts to light
differently. This doesn't work on prints.
I also have a high priced HP scanner, but it is no match for the Canon in doing
slides. Don't let the numbers in the ads fool you, stick with a Canon or Nikon
scanner. HP should stick to building scopes...
You should try a few different scans of the same negative and see for your self.
I seldom go over 1200, or under 600, but it depends on the cropping I plan to
do. 2400 is the max of my Canon as far as I know... don't bother with
'extrapolated' scans.
If you have room, use TIF or similar. If you use JPG, you must set the program
to save the absolute minimal compression, or the largest file size. This is ok
if you don't plan to ever re-save them or re-work them.
You need the FARE software bundle... I think... it's not listed in my computer!
It comes with the better Canons.
As far as archiving goes, save the data on SEVERAL different media, CDr, DVDr,
and get yourself an external HD as well. It's not fun to put in a CDr and get a
'file cannot be read' error!
Most people use Photoshop. Elements 4 is around $100, but takes time to learn.
Check out this pic, I scanned it in the Canon, it was a half-size 35, very very
tiny slide! This pic is un-edited, as is from the scanner. The original is
better then this web version... they cut it down somewhat...
http://www.pbase.com/flintstonestudio/image/57901185


BobF@nospam.ca


Re: Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

...
Never ever discard the originals.
The negatives of course. There is one less chance for bad things to happen.
4000 dpi for negatives. 300 dpi for prints.
Not really important. Store all files on archival quality media (the gold
variety). The plain discount kind won't last, and all of your effort will
be wasted.
Photoshop Elements.
Jim


Jim


Re: Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

I would not get rid of the printed ones, you might at sometime decide
to re-scan or you might loss the digital files.
All most all of the time it is far better to scan the negatives if you
have a film scanner. There is both more range in the negative and more
detail then you are going to see on a typical 4 x 6 print. I do have
some negatives that are in such bad shape that scans from the print are
better.
This depends on the print, no less then 300ppi and sometimes a bit
higher.
If you are scanning prints then jpeg at high quality will likely be as
good as tiff, since there is not much range in a scan of a print. If
you are scanning film you have to take more care if you are saving as a
jpeg since a scan of film can have a fair bit of dynamic range. The
jpeg format is not nearly as bad as what some people believe but saving
as tiff is safer. Note you can batch convert from tiff to jpeg if at
some point you decide you really want them as jpeg and not tiff.
A cheap print scanner will likely do fine, but if you get a film
scanner make sure to get one that has digital ICE, this removes most of
scan defects from dust and scratches.
You might try Photoshop Elements, it is a scaled down version of
Photoshop and can be had for well under $100.
Scott


Scott W


Re: Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

In article <1149864462.719151.23860@j55g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
Please reconsider getting rid of your prints. You may find that they
are the only truly long-term "storage" you have.
--
Phil Stripling | email to the replyto address is presumed
The Civilized Explorer | spam and read later. email from this URL
http://www.cieux.com/ | http://www.civex.com/ is read daily.


Phil Stripling


Re: Archiving Old Photos - A Newbie Question

amitstei@gmail.com writes:
It's much better to scan from the negatives if you have a suitable
scanner. A dedicated film scanner, like a Nikon Coolscan-V, say. On
a consumer flatbed, even if it claims the have the ability, the
results are usually pretty marginal.
Snapshot prints rarely have any information beyond 300PPI. To be
really safe, maybe you should scan at 600PPI (but that makes the files
4 times as big).
I'd never store my master copy in a lossy format (if I had a choice;
jpeg comes out of the digital cameras in many modes).
Don't know the model, but generally most scanners do well enough with
opaque originals. But scanning the negatives is better, and that
takes a specialized scanner.
If photography is an ongoing hobby, bite the bullet and get into
Photoshop.
--
David Dyer-Bennet, <mailto:dd-b@dd-b.net>, <http://www.dd-b.net/dd-b/>
RKBA: <http://www.dd-b.net/carry/>
Pics: <http://dd-b.lighthunters.net/> <http://www.dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/>
Dragaera/Steven Brust: <http://dragaera.info/>


David Dyer-Bennet


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