Those scanners are crap. They work but just aren’t a great solution - low res, low dynamic range, awful colour correction and they just suck all the charm out of the original quality.
If it’s something you want to preserve a decent copy of for the future, it’s worth spending a bit of cash getting a lab to scan them as tiffs and jpegs. It won’t cost a bomb, but it won’t be cheap either but it’ll be an order of magnitude better than the little machines.
Other option, if you have some camera kit and a few spare evenings is to photograph them using a dslr and macro lens on a light box. Bit of a ball-ache but you’ll get amazing results that way.
Also, some flatbed scanners are great at this and have the necessary hardware (backlights, film holders) to do it properly. I think it was an Epsom V750 or something. Could even pick on up on eBay and flip it when you’re done.
Those scanners are crap. They work but just aren’t a great solution - low res, low dynamic range, awful colour correction and they just suck all the charm out of the original quality.
If it’s something you want to preserve a decent copy of for the future, it’s worth spending a bit of cash getting a lab to scan them as tiffs and jpegs. It won’t cost a bomb, but it won’t be cheap either but it’ll be an order of magnitude better than the little machines.
Other option, if you have some camera kit and a few spare evenings is to photograph them using a dslr and macro lens on a light box. Bit of a ball-ache but you’ll get amazing results that way.
Also, some flatbed scanners are great at this and have the necessary hardware (backlights, film holders) to do it properly. I think it was an Epsom V750 or something. Could even pick on up on eBay and flip it when you’re done.