#16 in Office scanners & accessories
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Reddit mentions of Plustek OpticFilm 7600I SE Film Scanner
Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 2
We found 2 Reddit mentions of Plustek OpticFilm 7600I SE Film Scanner. Here are the top ones.
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SilverFast for professionals: Advanced users will be delighted with the bundled world-class image editing software - SilverFast SE 6.6 iSRDTwo film holders are provided: One is for mounted slides, holding up to four mounted slidesBuilt-in Multi-Sampling function for quality image.Enhanced with Multi-Exposure functions on negative FilmUSB High Speed 2.0 connection, up to 4 times faster than standard USB1.1 transfer speed.Enhanced with Multi-Exposure functions on negative FilmBuilt-in Multi-Sampling function for quality image.USB High Speed 2.0 connection, up to 4 times faster than standard USB1.1 transfer speed.Two film holders are provided: One is for mounted slides, holding up to four mounted slidesSilverFast for professionals: Advanced users will be delighted with the bundled world-class image editing software - SilverFast SE 6.6 iSRD
Specs:
Height | 8.4 Inches |
Length | 17.9 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Weight | 7.5 Pounds |
Width | 10.25 Inches |
Depends on how much time you have and how many photos/negatives you have. If its only a few, try your local photo print house (preferably a nice professional non-chain shop). If it is more than a few, try an online place like ScanCafe. If we are talking boxes and boxes and you have time on your hands and are tech savvy, consider a film scanner with infrared channel ($400), a flatbed scanner with touchup software ($150), and scanning software ($80). If you know nothing about photo restoration/touchup, you'd be best to just pay ScanCafe to do it.
Eh, that's about right. I pay $6 for color $7 for black and white, processing only. If I want print quality scans it's another $7. I go to Photoworks in San Francisco, so it's a bit pricy, but everyone there is extremely helpful and careful with my film. I've gotten burned too many times at store photo labs.
I've been shooting a ton of film, so I think my next major photography investment is going to be in a film scanner so I can just do the scans myself, most likely this one.
Ektar is really nice. Kodak uses the same technology in its Vision line of motion picture films, so that was my first experience with it. Skin tones, especially on darker skinned people, can be a problem depending on lighting.