Shooting pictures on 35mm or medium format film is fun, and sometimes really challenging. And as any film photographer knows, actually getting your beautiful film shots onto your computer is not easy.
Scanning film is great for archival purposes as well as sharing said photos digitally. However, if you’re scanning 120 film, aka medium format, it can be expensive to get the requisite hardware. 35mm ...
Lomography's Smartphone Film Scanner subscribes to the notion that everything old is new again by turning 35mm film strips into shareable motion pictures. Shooting photos or videos on 35mm film is ...
Odds are many people out there have old developed film from the old days of 35 mm photography lying around. If you ever wished that you could take those old photos from physical film and transfer them ...
Wolverine Data, Inc. has introduced a new and innovative standalone film scanner that instantly converts 35mm film negatives and slides into digital images without the need for a computer or ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Plustek OpticFilm 135i on a wooden surface. Film photography continues its comeback, with a whole new generation of photographers ...
Film isn't dead. It just needs a new digital life. Enter the Cintel Scanner 2 from Blackmagic Design. A 35mm film scanner that can scan 4K HDR files directly into Resolve 15. Film has traditionally ...
November 14, 2008 Wolverine Data has presented consumers who want to preserve old film and slides with a solution that doesn't involve archive boxes and frequent dusting. The Wolverine F2D Scanner can ...
The quarantimes has made me finally do something I've been threatening to do for 6 or 7 years and develop my own black and white film at home. The actual developing turned out great (if terrifying to ...
Plustek Technology, a manufacturer of consumer, prosumer and professional imaging devices, announced today the launch of its new flagship film scanner, the OpticFilm 120. The OpticFilm 120 was ...
No one uses 35mm cameras anymore. Okay, most people don't use them, I still know a few photographers that refuse to move into the digital age because they think the older 35mm film has a better look ...
I'm looking for recommendations for film scanners in the sub $400 range - I only need it to do 35mm range, preferable able to bulk scan from uncut transparencies (develop film, no cut or ...