View allAll Photos Tagged digitization

Digitized with Fujifilm X-T3

 

This is my favorite one from this roll of film. It was worth the mosquito bites. :)

Digitizing the village with fiber optics.

digitized Mar 17, 2016

Minolta x570 film camera

Minolta Rokkor 58mm f:1.4

 

This photo reminds me of the final scene in the 1st Terminator movie, where Sarah Conners is at the gas station climbing into her Jeep getting ready to head out into the coming storm

This was taken at the start of our trip to Mt Rushmore on Nevada Hwy 50 officially known as "The loneliest Road in America".

The blazer is stopped because we wanted to look at what we were getting into.

There is nothing out there at all as you can see. You could sit in the middle of the road and eat your lunch in peace.

It was so quiet when I turned the truck off, we looked at each other and noted "The Silence Was Deafening"

 

Cameradactyl Homunculus with Portra 400 in an RB67 holder, with 75mm Mamiya-Press Lens. Digitized with a Fuji X-T2 and 50mm/3.5 Minolta Celtic Macro lens and Negative Lab Pro.

Giants Of Jazz: Benny Carter

 

Vinyl LP (1980)

Label: Time-Life Records

Catalog No.: STL-J10

Monophonic / Stereo

out-of-print

Number of Discs: 3

 

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▶ Benny Carter (1907-2003) was a composer, arranger, big-band leader, and multi-instrumentalist, fluent on alto sax, tenor sax, trumpet, and clarinet. His instrumental tone was gorgeous; his chops, wicked good; his solos, logical yet inventively surprising. He was a great among greats, without, perhaps, as much renown as others.

 

▶ This album is one in the 3-LP set, Giants of Jazz: Benny Carter (1980) — itself one in a Time-Life series of jazz compilations— that provides a snapshot of his career, comprising 40 recordings from 1929 through 1977.

 

A wonderful find in a local thrift shop...and in good condition.

10 January 2020.

 

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▶ "No jazz musician has ever exceeded, and few have approached, Benny Carter in all-around achievement. If a jazz decathlon were held that included competition in alto saxophone, trumpet, clarinet, tenor saxophone, piano, and trombone performances, as well as arranging, composing, conducting, and instructing, Carter might not win every event, but his point total almost certainly would eclipse that of any conceivable rival."

— Morroe Berger (LP pamphlet)

 

▶ The sound of the set is very good. A crucial reason is its recording engineer: Frank Abbey (1922-2008). In 1951, he began working at Capitol Records, recording pop, jazz, classical, rock, broadway, and spoken word for nearly two decades. In 1968, he moved to CBS Records (later Sony Music) where he specialized in remastering —and then digital remastering. Abbey retired in 1988 but continued to freelance from his own New Jersey studio. In 1991, he received a Grammy for technical excellence for re-mastering the original recordings of bluesman Robert Johnson.

 

▶ The notes to the accompanying 52-page pamphlet —at times overly fulsome— were written by Morroe Berger (1918-1963): a sociology professor at Princeton University who wrote about jazz. The notes on the music —detailed and less florid— were written by Morroe's son, Edward "Ed" Berger (1949-2017), a longtime curator at the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University.

 

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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.

— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

 

Fujifilm GX680 iii | Fujinon 180mm F/3.2 | Kodak Portra 160

 

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

The walk down to St Andrews Harbour; just behind are the ruins of the castle and, even closer, the cathedral.

Fuji RDP100 35mm slide film, Olympus OM2SP.

Standard consumer E6 chemicals, processed at home.

 

Digitized using a Nikon D7000 dslr, Nikkor 40mm lens, JJC ES-2 adapter.

RAW file edited in Photoshop Elements 11.

photos for the collage with Canon G12

 

in english language below

 

Wer heute - immer noch oder wieder – analog fotografiert, der steht oft vor dem Problem „wie bekomme ich das Foto auf den Computer, um es z.B. hier bei flickr zeigen zu können?“

 

Die schnellste und einfachste Lösung ist den Film in eine der großen Drogeriefilialen zu bringen und dort entwickeln zu lassen. Mit Foto-CD kostet ein 36er Film ca. 10€. Dieser Preis ist nur deshalb möglich, weil der gesamte Prozess mit modernster Technik vollautomatisch erfolgt.

 

An dieser Stelle will ich mit meinen Erfahrungen und meiner Lösung aufsetzen.

 

Der vollautomatische Prozess einer standardisierten C41 Filmentwicklung führt zu Resultaten, die ich mit einem C41 ChemieSet nicht besser und preiswerter hinbekäme. Zu einem anderen Ergebnis komme ich bei der automatischen Ausbelichtung von Negativen. Im besten Fall bekomme ich ein Ergebnis "state of the art" aktueller Scannertechnik.

 

Solche digitalisierten analogen Fotos sind damit hauptsächlich ein Resultat der eigesetzten Technik, vom "Klick" bis zum fertigen Foto. Ähnlich einem Digicamfoto im Automatikmodus, nur nicht so "gut".

 

Auch ein "Experte" wird anhand solcher Fotos nicht erkennen, ob mit einer Voigtländer CLR, Rollei 35, OM2 oder Leica fotografiert wurde.

 

Eine Eigenschaft von Automatiken ist, dass sie einen definierten Standard abdecken aber kaum Raum für Nuancen lassen. Letztere, sowie kleine charmante Fehler, werden nach vorgegebenen Parametern automatisch korrigiert.

 

Fazit: mein Beitrag zu einem "tollen Foto" ist übersichtlich gering. Er erschöpft sich in der Motivauswahl und einer rudimentären Bedienung der analogen Technik.

 

Dazu kommt, dass die niedrige Auflösung (ca. 1,5 MB je KB-Kleinbild Foto), kaum Spielraum für Korrekturen der automatischen Parameter, z.B. Tonwert, Farbe, Kontrast etc., bietet.

 

Absehbarer Frust für einen Sammler, der mit seinen „Schätzchen“ gerne auch mal fotografiert?

 

Muss nicht sein, wenn man den letzten Schritt des Laborprozesses, das Digitalisieren, selber macht.

Wie das einfach und sehr kostengünstig geht, will ich nachstehend aufzeigen.

 

Ich benötige also zunächst nur ein Negativ. Die Herstellung überlasse ich einem Großlabor, welches das viel besser und preiswerter kann als ich. Kosten dafür betragen ca. 2,50€, zusätzlich die obligatorischen Papierabzüge (im kleinsten Format). Gesamtkosten ca. 7,50€ je Film. Auf Erstellung einer Foto CD verzichte ich, weil ich ja selber scannen will.

 

Das Negativ scanne ich mit einem einfachen Photoscanner mit Durchlichteinheit im manuellen Modus mit der höchsten Auflösung (bei meinem scanner sind das 1600 dpi). Der Photoscanner ist dazu mit einem PC verbunden, der den Scanner steuert. Das Scan-Ergebnis bearbeite ich danach mit einer Bildbearbeitungssoftware. Fertig.

 

Soweit der Blick aus 10.000 Meter Höhe. Nachstehend eine kurze Beschreibung meines Equipment, welches sich aus meiner Vorliebe für Photoshop CS2 ergibt. Wieso das? CS2 ist ein professionelles Werkzeug von Adobe, das nichts mehr kostet aber „alles kann“, wenn man sich ausreichend mit dem Werkzeug beschäftigt.

 

Die erforderlichen Geräte setzen sich wie folgt zusammen: Ein alter Computer Latitude D520 mit Windows XP und Photoshop CS2, verbunden mit einem ebenso alten „Epson Perfection 1660 Photo“. Das Ergebnis sind scans mit >10 MB 2282x1550 pixel (je KB-Kleinbild Foto). Diese TIF-Dateien bieten ausreichend Potenzial für eine abschließende Bildkorrektur.

 

Der Arbeitsplatz ist nur beispielhaft. Entscheidend ist ausschließlich, dass alle Komponenten (Rechner, Scanner, Bildbearbeitungs-SW) von einem Betriebssystem unterstützt werden. Bei älterem Equipment ist Windows XP oft eine sehr gute Lösung. Prozessortakt und RAM sind eher nebensächlich.

 

Auch Photoshop CS2 muss nicht sein. Es gibt genügend andere Freeware, die gute Leistungen bei der Bild-Nachbearbeitung erbringen und einen Scanner ansteuern können.

 

Ein paar Anmerkungen zum scannen. Ich habe die Erfahrung gemacht, dass es für die Bildqualität egal ist, ob beim scannen die Emulsion oder die glatte Schicht des Negativs oben ist. Ggf. muss das Foto bei der Nachbearbeitung noch horizontal gespiegelt werden. Wichtiger ist, dass beim Einschieben in die Negativschablone eine Planlage verbogener oder gewölbter Negative erreicht wird. Ansonsten ergeben sich Unschärfen, die digital nicht korrigiert werden können.

 

Das scannen übernimmt die Scanner-eigene SW. Ich wähle dazu den manuellen Modus mit automatischer Belichtung, weil ich danach sowieso korrigiere. Ziel des scans ist nicht ein fertiges Bild, sondern eine Datei mit vielen BildInformationen. Deshalb wähle ich die höchste Dpi-Stufe und das Dateiformat TIF.

 

Abschließend noch ein paar Anmerkungen zur Bildbearbeitung. Die Anpassungen sind erforderlich, weil ich – wie oben beschrieben - die Scanner-Software (Twain) auf "Automatik" eingestellt habe. Damit passen erste wichtige Parameter wie z.B. die Helligkeit zumindest bei meinem Scanner einigermaßen.

 

Ab jetzt erfolgt der Prozess, den ich keiner Automatik der Welt überlasse und auch keinem kleinen professionellen scan-Service mit tollen Mitarbeitern. Denn "ich will eigene Ergebnisse".

 

Der erste Schritt ist ein Aufruf der „Gradationskurven“. Bei CS2 werden dort – neben den Kurven – 3 Pipetten gezeigt. Die rechte davon korrigiert das Foto auf Basis „weiß“. Gehen Sie an eine Stelle des Bildes, die eigentlich weiß sein soll, z.B. Sommerwolken. Dort anklicken und – wenn Sie ein Sonntagskind sind – haben Sie mit einem Klick ein wunderbar ausgeglichenes Bild. Ansonsten mehrmals ausprobieren oder den üblichen Feinschliff von Tonwert, Kontrast, Farbe etc. schrittweise durchführen.

 

Bei CS2 lassen sich die grundlegenden Anpassungen im Menue unter „Bild anpassen“ im oberen Block unter Tonwertkorrektur, Auto-Tonwertkorrekt usw. durchführen.

 

Das so entstandene digitale Foto trägt somit schon einmal meine "Handschrift". Der Grad einer eigenen "Handschrift" lässt sich unbegrenzt steigern. Grenzen setzten lediglich die eigene Phantasie und die Virtualität mit der man "auf dem Klavier", sorry der Software, spielen kann.

 

Übrigens, den oben beschriebenen Arbeitsplatz nutze ich nur zum scannen, denn für die digitale Nachbearbeitung ist deutlich mehr Rechnerleistung erforderlich. Die Kosten für die gebrauchten Geräte eines solchen Scan-Arbeitsplatzes sollten 50€ nicht übersteigen.

 

Gutes Gelingen, Alex

 

Anyone who takes analog photos today - still or again - is often faced with the problem "how do I get the photo onto the computer so that I can show it here at flickr, for example?

 

The fastest and easiest solution is to take the film to one of the large drugstore branches and have it developed there. With photo CD a 36 film costs about 10€. This price is only possible because the entire process is fully automated using the latest technology.

 

This is where I want to start with my experience and my solution.

 

The fully automatic process of a standardized C41 film development leads to results which I could not achieve better and cheaper with a C41 chemistry set. I come to a different result with the automatic exposure of negatives. In the best case I get a result "state of the art" of current scanner technology.

 

Such digitised analogue photos are thus mainly the result of the applied technique, from the "click" to the finished photo. Similar to a digicam photo in automatic mode, only not so "good".

 

Even an "expert" will not be able to tell from such photos whether a Voigtländer CLR, Rollei 35, OM2 or Leica was used.

 

The character of automatics is that they cover a defined standard but leave hardly any room for nuances. The latter and small charming errors are automatically corrected or ironed out according to predefined parameters. Conclusion: my contribution to a "great photo" is clearly small. It is exhausted in the choice of motifs and a rudimentary handling of the old analog treasures.

 

In addition, the low resolution (approx. 1.5 MB per KB small picture photo) offers hardly any leeway for corrections of the automatic parameters, e.g. tone value, color, contrast etc.

 

Predictable frustration for a collector who likes to take pictures with his "sweethearts"?

 

Not necessarily, if you do the last step of the laboratory process, the digitizing, yourself.

 

How this can be done simply and very inexpensively is shown below.

 

So I only need a negative first. I leave the production to the industrial laboratory, who are much better at it than I am. Costs for this are about 2,50€, plus the obligatory paper prints (in the smallest format). I do without the photo CD. Total costs about 7,50€ per film.

 

I scan the negative with a simple photo scanner with a transparency unit in manual mode with the highest resolution (in my scanner this is 1600 dpi) in manual mode. The photoscanner is connected to a PC, which controls the scanner. I then process the scan result with an image processing software. Done.

 

So much for the view from a height of 10.000 meters. The following is a short description of my equipment, which results from my preference for Photoshop CS2. Why is that? CS2 is a professional tool from Adobe, which doesn't cost anything more but "can do everything" if you spend enough time with the tool.

 

The rest of my tool is composed as follows: An old computer Latitude D520 with Windows XP and Photoshop CS2, connected to an equally old "Epson Perfection 1660 Photo". The result are scans with >10 MB 2282x1550 pixel (each KB small picture photo). These TIF files offer enough potential for a final image correction.

 

The workplace is only exemplary. The only decisive factor is that all components (computer, scanner, image processing software) are supported by an operating system. In case of older equipment, Windows XP is often a very good solution. Processor clock and RAM are rather unimportant.

 

Also Photoshop CS2 is not necessary. There are enough other freeware that can perform well in image post-processing and can control a scanner.

 

And a few more remarks about scanning. I made the experience that it doesn't matter for the image quality if the emulsion or the smooth layer of the negative is on top when scanning. You may have to flip the photo horizontally during post-processing. It is more important that a flatness of bent or curved negatives is achieved when inserting them into the negative stencil. Otherwise, blurriness will result which cannot be corrected digitally.

 

The scanning is done by the scanner's own SW. I choose the manual mode with automatic exposure, because I correct afterwards anyway. The goal of the scan is a file with a lot of image information. Therefore I choose the highest Dpi level and the file format TIF.

 

Finally a few remarks about image processing. The adjustments are necessary because - as described above - I set the scanner software (Twain) to "automatic". Thus first important parameters like e.g. the brightness fit at least with my scanner to some extent.

 

From now on, the process, which I don't leave to any automatic system in the world and also to a small professional scan service with great employees, will be done. Because "I want my own results".

 

My first step is to call up the "gradation curves". In CS2, 3 pipettes are shown there - besides the curves. The one on the right corrects the photo on basis "white". Go to a part of the image that should actually be white, e.g. summer clouds. Click there and - if you are a Sunday child - you will have a wonderfully balanced picture with just one click. Otherwise try it out several times or do the usual fine tuning of tonal value, contrast, colour etc. step by step.

 

With CS2, the basic adjustments can be made in the menu under "Adjust Image" in the upper block under Tone Value Correction, Auto Tone Correct etc.

 

The resulting digital photo will therefore already bear my "signature". The degree of your own "handwriting" can be increased indefinitely. The only limits are your own imagination and the virtuality on which you can play "on the piano", sorry software.

 

By the way, I only use the workplace described above for scanning, as for the digital post-processing significantly more computer power is required. The costs for the used equipment of such a scan workstation should not exceed 50€.

 

my photos overview

www.fluidr.com/photos/193216061@N05

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

Ancora lavori dopo l'alluvione del novembre 1966

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

Another in the 'Traces of Botany' Series

 

26th August 2018, 6:15pm

 

Detail from a 5x4 slide.

 

Linhof Technikardan S45

Nikkor-W 210mm f/5.6

Fujichrome Velvia 50 5x4

¼" f/22

compound movements for focus and composition

300mm bellows extension

 

Home-developed with Jobo CPE-3 and Tetenal E6 (FD 7'10").

Digitized with 4-frame stitch on lightbox with D800E/85PC-E.

IMAGE INFO

- Viewpoint is looking north-east from the starboard side of an ANSETT WA BAe 146 "Junior Jumbo" passenger jet, cruising at an altitude of approx. 6,000 meters while approaching Port Hedland from Carnarvon, Western Australia.

- The cloud bank gives the classic illusory appearance of cotton wool "you could almost walk on".

- Geo-location is approximated.

***************************

SOURCE INFO

- I captured the original image using a CANON EOS-1 SLR with

AGFA XRS 100 35mm color negative film & a Tamron 28-300mm AF Zoom lens.

****************************

PROCESS INFO

- Digitized using a CANON Canoscan 8800F scanner @ 3200 dpi & 48 bit color depth.

- Original image processed with Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0.

The flight of four fighters is shown shortly before the planes peel off to lose altitude for landing at their 8th Fighter Command Station in England.

 

Photographer not credited.

 

Photo Source: U.S. National Archives. Digitized by Signal Corps Archive.

Digitized from and old photograph from my collection

Digitized photo made in June 1996. Most probably gone now - 2025.

This picture was taken more than ten years ago when i visited Bangkok with my film camera. The digital conversion was done recently.

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro

  

Digitized from slide. Central Coast California

Digitized Kodak B&W paper photo

4/17: Still digitizing slides (~3K). Then prints (~6K). And still doing long walks.

 

Today I started digitizing my mother’s slides, prints, and films. It’s going to be a lengthy and emotional project; I’ve already discovered images I’ve never seen before. Given the amount of content I have, I expect I’ll be heads-down for a few weeks. Fortunately my mom was very organized. I am as well. I’m a GTD person, for those who know.

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

Photo

Camera: Canon EOS-1V

Film: KODAK Portra 400

 

Lens: SIGMA 12-24mm f/4.5-5.6 EX DG HSM

Filter: -

 

Film processing

Process: C-41

Labor: Pálvölgyi Fotó - Budapest

 

Digitization

Film scanner: NORITSU KOKI QSS-32_33

Canon EOS1-V code: 48-122

File: 220630_canon-1v_48-122-01

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

Digitized from slide. Pinellas County, Florida

Digitized Slide from. Leica film camera

PictionID:54491593 - Catalog:1962 Atlas 16F - Title:1962 Atlas 16F - Filename:19621107_16F_0129.JPG - - ---- Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

 

Pentax K1000 | Ilford HP5 400

 

Digitized with Epson V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0 | Lomography

 

Iford DDX

Digitized from Kodak Ektachrom

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

  

Chicago's first L; the South Side Rapid Transit Company. Locomotive-hauled trailer of 1892 dating from the line's opening (with service extended to Jackson Park the following year to serve the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition). These trailers were motorized in 1897-98. One car from this original group of 180 survives today at the Chicago History Museum.

 

From the incredible Jackson & Sharp Company collection in the Delaware Public Archives. Hats off to the team at DPA for their extraordinary efforts in digitizing the hundreds of Jackson & Sharp images and placing them online for research, well done!

 

cdm16397.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15323coll...

nikon f100

fujichrome

nikon es-2 film digitizing adapter

digitized photo/ 2000

"Behind the Liebfrauenkirche, another square, Jesuiten Platz, offers another of the strange tourist attractions you’ll find sprinkled around Koblenz. Standing high up on a fountain, tucked away in a corner of the Jesuit square is a bronze statue of a boy. He’s hunched over slightly, and you can tell he’s up to no good. This is the Schangelbrunnen Fountain (aka: The Naughty Boy of Koblenz). Periodically he spits a steady stream of water across the courtyard, spraying hapless tourists."

 

europeupclose.com/article/koblenz-another-jewel-in-german...

Digismartek provides best digitization services. Document management system helps to convert your paper document into digital document.

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

 

Hasselblad 501cm | Kodak Portra 400 NC 400

 

Digitized with Epson V500 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

 

Lab developed in

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

 

Chinon CE4 | Ilford HP5+ 400

 

Digitized with Epson Perfection V600 Photo + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2 | Epson

 

Home developed in Paranol S 1+50 | 25/20 | Kodak

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