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Thread: digital archive questions 1,2,3

  1. #1

    digital archive questions 1,2,3

    Hi

    I am digitalizing my negs, a few questions popped up during the archiving process

    1. how many various sizes of scan do you have? i.e. low res, high res?

    2. what are the resolutions you scan?

    3. software use to input details? lightroom? bridge?

    would love to know your workflow.
    thanks for sharing

  2. #2

    Join Date
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    I shoot transparencies exclusively, but most of this should apply to negatives as well. I am definitely in the "scan once" camp. Spotting is way too tedious to do it more than once. So I scan at the highest optical resolution of my scanner (Epson V700), around 2000dpi, and that is the resolution I work with down the line. I scan with the Epson software, and then import into Lightroom to make adjustments.

    Bob

  3. #3
    retrogrouchy
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    1) scan once, the best you can.
    2) for me, 2500dpi for 4x5", but it will depend on your hardware.
    3) VueScan, exiftool, and an external (SQL) database of content tags.

  4. #4
    bob carnie's Avatar
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    plus one on the scan once best you can.


    Quote Originally Posted by polyglot View Post
    1) scan once, the best you can.
    2) for me, 2500dpi for 4x5", but it will depend on your hardware.
    3) VueScan, exiftool, and an external (SQL) database of content tags.

  5. #5
    Jim Jones's Avatar
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    I agree with the others: scan, edit, and archive at high resolution. Then you can downsize, crop, and sharpen at whatever size is needed to post or print. Save those downsized files for any possible future use.

  6. #6
    Preston Birdwell
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    I am in the 'scan once' camp, too.

    **Scans are done at 1800 dpi (the max for my Microtek and Vuescan)
    **I create a 'Master File' that is edited in Photoshop. This file is never sharpened.
    **Files for print and/or the Web are created from the 'master file'.
    **I use an image management program to manipulate the metadata.
    **All files are backed up to external drives.

    --P
    Preston-Columbia CA

    "If you want nice fresh oats, you have to pay a fair price. If you can be satisfied with oats that have already been through the horse; that comes a little cheaper."

  7. #7
    Kirk Gittings's Avatar
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    Quote Originally Posted by bob carnie View Post
    plus one on the scan once best you can.
    ditto
    Thanks,
    Kirk

    at age 73:
    "The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
    But I have promises to keep,
    And miles to go before I sleep,
    And miles to go before I sleep"

  8. #8
    Abuser of God's Sunlight
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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    Agreed on all this. But realize that the day may come a when a new technology will convince you to scan again.

    I keep:
    1) the raw scan file (mine aren't truly raw files, but they're loosely cropped, and include all the detail and tonal information the scanner's can capture)
    2) the layered "master file" on which I've done all adjustments that aren't size-dependent
    3) purpose specific files, for any print or screen use. These are reduced (or occasionally enlarged) to final size, sharpened appropriately, and in some cases color-corrected based on soft proofing.

    I use Lightroom to manage digitally captured images. I manage scans manually. With scans, I'm dealing with numbers that are just in the hundreds. If I did a high volume of film work, I'd probably use a lightroom-like solution.

  9. #9

    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    thank you for sharing folks.

    how large is your file per image?

  10. #10

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    Re: digital archive questions 1,2,3

    300mb for 4x5 b&w tiff, 1gb for color. I scan at 3200dpi and resize and optionally sharpen for the output I aim at. When printing, I don't resize, just crop. I let the print driver handle any resampling; it's perfectly capable I find.

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