Let's think out of the box. Besides burying color prints which will fade slightly over time there's another solution. Make three color separation of each image. Each separation is made onto a thin gold plate.
Hey, permanence isn't cheap.
And all you can thank me thousands of years from now to have pictures from today.
Yep,
Garbage in... garbage out!
You must first determine the slide is sharp. A loop will with this.
Even though I use OS X daily in a professional manner I can't say Macintoshes are better for graphics. This is what people imply when talking about these computer being better for images. Not true. I run Adobe Photoshop CS on a PC two feet from my Mac. I just prefer OS X. The PC has a custom application written to complete my job.
If the applications are written today for linux, they're be written in the future.
Here's a real test for your system. Don't use files from that scanner. Get some stock images which you know are sharp and color corrected.
See how you fare then.
Good luck.
Let's think out of the box. Besides burying color prints which will fade slightly over time there's another solution. Make three color separation of each image. Each separation is made onto a thin gold plate. Hey, permanence isn't cheap. And all you can thank me thousands of years from now to have pictures from today.
Yep, Garbage in ... garbage out!
You must first determine the slide is sharp. A loop will with this.
Even though I use OS X daily in a professional manner I can't say Macintoshes are better for graphics. This is what people imply when talking about these computer being better for images. Not true. I run Adobe Photoshop CS on a PC two feet from my Mac. I just prefer OS X. The PC has a custom application written to complete my job.
If the applications are written today for linux, they're be written in the future.
Here's a real test for your system. Don't use files from that scanner. Get some stock images which you know are sharp and color corrected.
See how you fare then.
Good luck.