Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]You ought to look into a slide scanner and epson printer. I scan my slides on an Olympus ES-10 scanner, fairly inexpensive for scanning and print them on an Epson inkjet printer (Photo 1200). Using the epson photo glossy paper and the software supplied with my scanner, I can get great looking prints. To maximize the prints to page I paste all of the prints into my microsoft powerpoint program, then print. I have experimented with other papers and the Epson (for me) seems to give the nearest prints to "cibachrome" as I've seen. It works fine. I spray these with a protective clear spray and give em to my wife to put in a book or to my daughter to chew on (she's 18 mths). ! This is a great combination for making your 'prints' at home! If you have a slide that you're in love with and want larger than 8x10, go for the traditional cibachrome route or consider intranegatives... best of luck. Kent - -----Original Message----- From: Bud Cook <budcook@ibm.net> To: Leica_Post <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Date: Wednesday, September 22, 1999 8:49 PM Subject: [Leica] Obtaining Color Prints >I suspect that I'm part of a minuscule minority that's only interested in >slides for projection. The reason I'm into slides is that the alternative >of obtaining prints from color negative or color reversal film seems very >expensive. > >Do LUGgers simply send their film off to Kodalux or some other automated >service to obtain prints. I've tried that and found that the results are >pretty poor compared to a projected slide. My wife likes prints so she's >been having them made for a long time. She's tried a lot of sources and >found that Kodalux is about as good as anybody else she's tried. However, >even film shot with Summicrons won't produce prints that are noticeably >better than those from a good P&S. > >I've had a few Cibachromes made but I can't afford to have a professional >lab make prints for me. I've looked into setting up my own color lab but >found that it would take a lot of time and money to do that as well. Just >thinking about trying to maintain liquids at a fixed temperature gives me a >headache. > >Now there is a third option (digital) but that's not cheap either if the >goal is to have better than drug store quality results. > >So where do LUGgers get prints made? At what price? What kind of quality >are you getting? > >TIA, >Bud Cook > >