I haven’t found “restore colour” etc to work very wellĮven when I have identified the film type and it’s on Hamrick’s pull down list - I haven’t had much success - I leave everything on generic now.īy the way, I am just processing a batch of my wife’s photos from the 80’s: Olympus Pen F half frame - on various colour print films ( mostly Kodak colour cp100 ) Probably better to scan into raw and use colorperfect etc but too expensive for me. Still, I often have to go open the jpeg scans in post ( I use dxo pl4 but anything will do ) - and then tweak white balance, clarity/vibrance/etc etc. Set up normal scan - leaving the colour on “white balance” for every scan. Set preview resolution to 1000 or fairly highĬrop to inter frame and keep clear of light leakage from adjacent frameĬheck crop area is still well within inter frame When I just have to work with an inter frame boundary it’s more tricky. When I’ve got a clear leader section it’s better. I suspect getting the base colour registered is part of the problem. Yes, I have been trying this for the last few rolls - it’s a bit curate’s egg ish - sometimes it’s fine and others it isn’t. Just go to from the web browser in your Raspberry Pi and click the red button – you’ll be scanning in minutes. We think you’ll be as excited as we are! If you own VueScan 9.7.25, then the version for the Raspberry Pi is free for you. If you don’t know much about the Raspberry Pi then read below for details. With that in mind, we are delighted to announce that VueScan now supports Raspberry Pi – and it’s a late Christmas present for our customers. In normal life! In the last newsletter we promised that we would continue to focus on adding new features and always being innovative. If you're starting from the beginning, then read our newsletters from April 2018 to November 2018 where we ran a series of articles 'All about scanning photos'. This could really help you stay in contact with loved ones and share your family history. On our Support page we have tutorials to help you with this, so take a look here: and this is the link for scanning multiple photos on a flatbed. We would like to suggest that now would be a great time to do all those scanning projects which take a lot of time and you've been putting off for years We do realise though that many of you will now be working from home, and will have a lot more free time in the house. Ed, Dave and myself are working from our home offices (in 3 different countries) and there is no change in our development program or the support levels you receive. Here at Hamrick Software work continues as normal.
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