Business & Finance1 min ago
Photo Slides
7 Answers
Is there something you can use to turn old photo slides into photos?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes if you Google slide converts you'll see lots of options which plug into your computer and some independent ones. They look a bit fiddly to use. There are photographic shops which will also do this for you.
http:// www.joh nlewis. com/ion -slides -foreve r-deskt op-slid e-film- scanner /p23175 4881?sk u=23175 4881&am p;s_kwc id=2dx9 2700016 6222448 81& tmad=c& amp;tmc ampid=2 &gc lid=COe KgLm9xN ECFYM4G wodqswC xA& gclsrc= aw.ds
http://
You can scan them.
Do you have a scanner and does it have a transpnarancy unit?
http:// www.ebu yer.com /542907 -epson- perfect ion-v55 0-photo -scanne r-b11b2 10301?m kwid=ss BnsIpVe _dt& ;pcrid= 5148241 4939&am p;pkw=& amp;pmt =&g clid=CP zLiby9x NECFWcq 0wodh9g F6w
Or you can get a slide scanner
http:// www.joh nlewis. com/ion -slides -foreve r-deskt op-slid e-film- scanner /p23175 4881?sk u=23175 4881&am p;s_kwc id=2dx9 2700016 6222448 81& tmad=c& amp;tmc ampid=2 &gc lid=CJD O5sq9xN ECFWYq0 wodgM4J uQ& gclsrc= aw.ds
Don't know if the photo areas at Tesco etc. do slide scanning.
Do you have a scanner and does it have a transpnarancy unit?
http://
Or you can get a slide scanner
http://
Don't know if the photo areas at Tesco etc. do slide scanning.
Yes but it's fiddly!
You need a film scanner, like this one:
http:// www.map lin.co. uk/p/io n-slide s-forev er-film -and-sl ide-sca nner-a7 6lb
They work in a similar way to normal flat-bed scanners but they use transmitted light (passed through the slides) instead of reflected light (bounced off a document).
At one time you had to pay thousands of pounds for a film scanner that had a good enough resolution to produce decent results but these days even cheap film scanners can do a remarkably good job. Even with the very best ones though you often need to fiddle with the colour settings (using an image editor) to get images looking exactly as they should. (Otherwise you might find that there's a colour cast on your images). So that's why I've described the task as rather 'fiddly'.
Once you've scanned the images to your computer (and tweaked them in an image editor, if necessary) you can print them out on your home inkjet printer or take them into a high street photo processing shop (on, say, a USB stick) for them to do the job for you.
However if you've only got a very small number of slides to scan it would be easier and cheaper to go straight to the photo processing shop in the first place, as they can convert slides to photos directly.
You need a film scanner, like this one:
http://
They work in a similar way to normal flat-bed scanners but they use transmitted light (passed through the slides) instead of reflected light (bounced off a document).
At one time you had to pay thousands of pounds for a film scanner that had a good enough resolution to produce decent results but these days even cheap film scanners can do a remarkably good job. Even with the very best ones though you often need to fiddle with the colour settings (using an image editor) to get images looking exactly as they should. (Otherwise you might find that there's a colour cast on your images). So that's why I've described the task as rather 'fiddly'.
Once you've scanned the images to your computer (and tweaked them in an image editor, if necessary) you can print them out on your home inkjet printer or take them into a high street photo processing shop (on, say, a USB stick) for them to do the job for you.
However if you've only got a very small number of slides to scan it would be easier and cheaper to go straight to the photo processing shop in the first place, as they can convert slides to photos directly.