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Thread: Scanning 120 film

  1. #1

    Scanning 120 film

    As with many of my posts, I am still learning and am looking for advice.

    I have a regular flatbed scanner with a negative scanner attachment for 35mm film only. Is there a trick to scanning 120 negatives on a flatbed scanner or will I have to invest in a scanner that is equipped with a 120 scanning attachment.

    Using the scanner bed, I am assuming I will need an even light source that will transmit light through the negative so the scanner can see it. I wonder if a small light table would work.

    Thanks,
    Alex

  2. #2

    Scanning 120 film

    I am fortunate enough to have a Epson 4490 scanner which is setup to scan 120 negatives with a mask with no problem.

    For larger negatives than 120 I just scan the whole bed with the negative and then crop and adjust in software.

    You will have to check to see if your scanner can scan the entire bed as a negative.

    Here is one interesting technique to get results with just a digital camera.

    http://jackimagex.wordpress.com/2008...ave-a-scanner/

    and

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/jack-imagex/2611979720/

    The quality will not be as good as a scanner can be, but results can be obtained.

  3. #3

    Scanning 120 film

    Another option is to make a mask from foam card or cardboard of an appropriate size but wide enough to fit 120 negatives.

    Just make sure your scanner can still read certain areas on the mask to be able to scan, sometimes these will be a certain shaped holes or cross bars on the mask.

  4. #4

    Scanning 120 film

    Thanks for the tips, Clocker.

    Alex

  5. #5

    Scanning 120 film

    See reply #10 of this post, I have exactly the situation you describe & do it as shown. 645's can be scanned in one piece but unfortunately anything larger has to be done in more than one pass & joined in software (not as bad as it sounds).

  6. #6

    Scanning 120 film

    Here's the B and W scanning technique I use created by my friend Michel Pollet ovet at the Manual Focus Forum

    Paul

    Would help to attach the link! http://oomz.net/bw_workflow/

  7. #7
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    Scanning 120 film

    Thank you, Paul, that is a very useful tutorial.

  8. #8

    Scanning 120 film

    Thanks for the tutorial.

  9. #9
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    Scanning 120 film

    Quote Originally Posted by 1761
    Using the scanner bed, I am assuming I will need an even light source that will transmit light through the negative so the scanner can see it. I wonder if a small light table would work.
    Preparing to scan my first negative by a regular flatbed scanner, I am going to build a "mirror light box" which would bring the light from the scanner itself
    through the negative. Just two mirrors held in right angle configuration... I would share my experience here.

    Martin

  10. #10

    Scanning 120 film

    Here's my story of trying to backlight large negatives on a flatbed scanner:

    I have an Espon 2480 flatbed scanner, it only takes 35mm and slide mounts, although I've scanned square format 120 slightly cropped in the slide mount windows. I expose larger format negatives, and experimented with using this el-cheapo scanner for larger negatives.

    I tried placing an 8x10 light box (the type used for viewing slides, full spectrum flourescent tube) face down upon the scanner, with film on the glass, and the scanner's software set to reflective; I can get an image that would otherwise look pretty good, but it is overlayed with a dense screen of parallel black lines, making the resulting image useless. I suspect the lines are some interaction between the lightbox illumination and the scanner's sensor.

    What I have not tried yet is using the external lightbox with the scanner set to the "film" scanning mode. In this mode it uses the film template, which has calibration areas along the edge. I would need to make my own overlay template with similar calibration markings in order to proceed with this experiment.

    ~Joe

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