I would guess that there are some skills needed to get the setup correct with your slide scanner. I would first need to makes friends with a skilled woodworker or toolmaker!
Motl678 wrote:
I would guess that there are some skills needed to get the setup correct with your slide scanner. I would first need to makes friends with a skilled woodworker or toolmaker!
Skill is not as important as ingenuity when combined with necessity. I could make you one like mine but it would cost you $2.00 as I would have to show a profit.
I use an Epson V600, and the results have been excellent.
Between shipping costs and the postage to pay, I'll just limp along with my current appliances. :-)
Haven't read all of the above but years ago, I bought a high quality Nikon scanner that has since gone out of production. I think there are scanners that are better and faster today. My criteria at the time was high quality rather than speed. Bottom line is that I screwed up in cost versus quality. My suggestion is pick the ones you really, really want, have them scanned at where ever and print them on a high quality printer or display them to your family on a TV.
Also, before Kodak stopped producing the Carousel projector, I bought about six bulbs just so I had a supply to last me a while (of course, none have blown out since).
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