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That’s me on the right. The print was in decent shape. Slightly faded but the app corrected that automatically.

That’s me on the right. The print was in decent shape. Slightly faded but the app corrected that automatically.

Scanning with Google PhotoScan

November 21, 2018 in review

Scanning film really isn’t much fun. It takes so much time that could be spent shooting. My Frontier and Pakon Scanners made the task a little bit easier but it still takes way too much time. Over the past few years I sort of started drifting away from scanning all together. I used to be obsessed with getting good scans. Especially color negatives were difficult. The scans just never looked as vibrant as the prints unless I had them scanned by a professional lab. Consumer scanners just don’t work for negative film. Even black and white film somehow doesn’t look right. At some point I had 20 some un-scanned rolls and just couldn’t get myself to scan them. I also realized that the look I like the best is what I get from my darkroom prints. I‘ forget how, but I stumbled upon Google PhotoScan in the AppStore and scanned a few of my prints. This app is absolutely amazing. I scanned old polaroids, old 4x6 color prints. The app even color corrects faded photos.

I then tried it on my 5x7 B&W prints. Super quick and easy. It really beats any flatbed scanner.   

 

B&W print on Ilford Art300 paper.

B&W print on Ilford Art300 paper.

Lith print on Fomatone 131 paper.

Lith print on Fomatone 131 paper.

I now stopped scanning my film altogether. I make a contact sheet of every roll I shoot and print the frames I like best. If I want to share anything I tape the print to my wall and pull out Google PhotoScan. No more long evening spent working with shitty scanners. Some may say I spend more time in the darkroom now but that’s what I prefer. I already spend hours in front of a computer at work everyday.  I much prefer the smell of developer in my darkroom. 

Tags: frontier, camera, film, Darkroom, photography, Print, Paper, Ilford, contact prints, Pakon, black and white, Tri-X, Photography, blogging, Scanner, how-to, color negative, pictures, 35mm, Frontier, Kodak, negative, Tokyo, printing, Film, review
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