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Digital noise
Scanning at a high resolution to capture all the details will also capture grain
of the film. There is no way around it. Here is a good site which tells you more than you ever need to know about scanning; http://www.scantips.com/ A good grain reduction software which I use is Digital Gem. By Kodak. It has settings for noise reduction as well as fine grain removal. http://www.asf.com/ I use the stand alone program more than the Gem that came with my Nikon film scanner software because it gives me more controls for suppression. Michael...... On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 10:47:38 -0800 (PST), " wrote: Scott W wrote: BTW this is one of my scans, I believe that was Kodachrome http://www.flickr.com/photos/3693962...zes/o/in/set-7... When viewed at that size it would be hard to tell that scan from a digital shot, but viewed closer and I see the noise in the scan that drives me nuts. Being a film guy, digital noise is one of the many concepts that is foreign to me. I do scan my slides and negs, so I would like to know what to look for and get some tips on correcting it. Can anybody post some examples or explain how it happens? Thanks in advance. |
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