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Digital Help
Q&A For Digital Photography Digital Help is designed to aid you in getting the most from your digital photography,
printing, scanning, and image creation. Each month, David Brooks provides solutions
to problems you might encounter with matters such as color calibration and management,
digital printer and scanner settings, and working with digital photographic
images with many different kinds of cameras and software. All questions sent
to him will be answered with the most appropriate information he can access
and provide. However, not all questions and answers will appear in this department.
Readers can send questions to David Brooks addressed to Shutterbug magazine,
through the Shutterbug website (www.shutterbug.com), directly via e-mail to:
editorial@shutterbug.com
or fotografx@mindspring.com
or by US Mail to: David Brooks, PO Box 2830, Lompoc, CA 93438. Keeping Film Flat For Scanning A. If I’m scanning a 6x6cm 120 film frame, what I do
is cut a piece of exposed, processed blank film, a tail from a roll wide enough
to fill the open space, and then use repositionable Scotch tape to secure it
to the end of the film frame to be scanned. Besides supporting that edge of
the film frame, it also blocks extraneous light from possibly affecting scan
quality. Film Scanning Strategy A. There are two parts to the scanning process. One is the physical function of reading the data gathered by the CCD sensor of the scanner and recording it. The other is color correcting and adjusting the raw scan data to result in desired image quality. The color correction and adjustment can be done before the final scan or after. It does not change the actual pixels, just the RGB value of each pixel as far as the color it represents. The “bit pattern,” as you call it, will be the same for the same physical scan of a particular film image. All that either scan software or Photoshop does in color correction and adjustment is to change the RGB number values for each individual pixel. Reducing Graininess In 35mm Film Scans A. DIGITAL GEM Pro is a Photoshop plug-in that you can purchase
as a download from the Kodak Austin Development Center website at: www.asf.com.
The earlier version that was bundled with some scanners never worked nearly
as well. I use DIGITAL GEM Pro quite a bit, but selectively as it does change
image attributes if you use a strong setting that eliminates grain almost entirely.
SilverFast Ai 6 also has a grain reduction function called GANE (Grain And Noise
Elimination) that provides a side by side, high-magnification before and after
display and an adjustment ability. GANE works well if graininess is not too
coarse. A. If you leave an ink jet printer for several months without
use you might expect some of the print nozzles to be clogged. You say you ran
the cleaning utility, but did you run the Nozzle Check afterward, and were all
of the sets of lines complete without any skips? If there are any drop-outs
in the Nozzle Check printout, you need to repeat running the head cleaning utility
until you obtain a Nozzle Check printout where all of the lines for each color
are filled in completely.
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