Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I followed with considerable interest the discussion a week or so ago regarding the merit of SilverFast's image scanning software for the Nikon LS 30/2000. I've not had very great success in scanning Tri-X with the Nikon scan package and, until I read the comments of actual users, was prepared to plump for the SilverFast. I'd used the demo program, which seemed to offer a substantial margin of improvement in scanning b&w emulsions. I decided against it. I picked up a reference to Hamrick's VueScan 1.4 in one of the nerwsgroups. He's written a new set of drivers for the Nikon and offers a demo on his website (http://www.hamrick.com/vsm.html). I've used it for a day or so, have been very impressed by its capabilities, and decided that for the whopping sum of $40 US, I'm not going to kvetch about a somewhat clumsy interface with PhotoShop, though I'm not certain that I've figured out whether this is some fault of my configuration. In the event, I've done some amazing things with a couple TriX negs I shot in Italy over twenty years ago. The combination of the Nikon LS 2000, VueScan, PhotoShop and a PhotoStylus 700 is now producing b&w stuff that I don't believe I could achieve with 35mm negs in a chemical darkroom: ever. I highly recommend VueScan on the basis of its b&w performance. I've been having so much fun that I haven't yet scanned a transparency with it. As always, these images will find their way to my website. Chandos Chandos Michael Brown Assoc. Prof., History and American Studies College of William and Mary http:www.wm.edu/CAS/ASP/faculty/brown