Is there a better way to scan the damn thing than to set the black point to
60% or such ? I always adjust it manually and then do a post-processing of
the individual images, but I'm trying to find the best workflow.
--
Guillaume Dargaud
http://www.gdargaud.net/
The best workflow and least amount of image exposure errors may be if you
select each image on the disc, instead of trying to scan the whole disc
at once. Use the marquee to select just one image.
You would have much more control over the exposure, your window of good
image would not be so narrow. Use the scanner's auto exposure. If you cut
out all of the background (the white disc) auto exposure will work much
better.
It would be a slow way to scan the images, but I think you will pick
speed once you get the technique down.
Ignore the script a few times and see how the images turn out.
--
CSM1
http://www.carlmcmillan.com
--
BTW, for those interested here's the shell/ImageMagick script I use to split
the scan of the disc in its constituent images:
http://www.gdargaud.net/Photo/KodakDiskScan.html
> The best workflow and least amount of image exposure errors may be if you
> select each image on the disc, instead of trying to scan the whole disc
> at once. Use the marquee to select just one image.
>
> You would have much more control over the exposure, your window of good
> image would not be so narrow. Use the scanner's auto exposure. If you cut
> out all of the background (the white disc) auto exposure will work much
> better.
I'm curious to know whether it's possible to select one image and use auto
exposure to calibrate the scanner and then use the same exposure to scan
all of the whole discs (assuming all the negatives have the same average
exposure - if not then you could divide them into light and dark images and
scan them in 2 batches calibrating exposure for each set).
It may be possible, but you can not do another Preview. You lose all
setting in preview.
I think you would be blind in positioning the disc.
I doubt that auto exposure would work, you would more likely have to do
Manual exposure.
Now if you can up with a mask that fit the disc image, you could then
position the disc over the cutout in the mask.
If you leave a calibration slot in your homemade mask, that might work.