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  • This is my set up,


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  • I don't personally, but there are a couple of people on here who scan with a DSLR and will surely chime in shortly -
    what would definitely be good practice though: masking off the whole "rest" of the light table with black cardboard to avoid stray light entering your lens, and crop the image itself (exclude the borders / parts of neighbouring images) before inverting / adjusting any further (shooting only the image itself as much as possible is obviously best so you don't have to throw away part of the resolution later..)
    Also I'd definitely google "inverting scans" followed by your specific film, as they all have a different "base" which should be accounted for ideally.
    Not 100% sure on this one but I remember reading that shooting ("scanning") the neg in colour and then converting to b&w yields better results compared to shooting straight in b&w - which is already an interpretation by the 5D of what the sensor captures - so start by shooting raw files instead 👍

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