Saw this today and thought of my brother when he was young.
New they sold for about 200 bucks.
The image on your camera screen is a small jpeg image processed in the camera. Your image in Lightroom or Photoshop looks good because both can handle a raw file. The other program you're using doesn't work with a raw file. Set your camera where it makes a raw and jpeg file, and you'll see the jpeg file coming out okay with the other program.
Back in the late fifties, when I was a fourth-grader, our teacher decided we should start an insect collection. So she gave each of us a pint jar with cotton balls soaked in Carbontetrachloride so we could quickly kill our specimens. I remember spending evenings out by the porch light, hoping to capture an exotic insect that no one else had turned in.
jerryc41 wrote:
It looks like both the car and the tree are dead.
Lots of tree shade in that first photo.
Go to eBay and see if they have something that would work.
This past fall, I received an email from Directv stating I would receive this season's Sunday Football Ticket for free. I'm not a big football fan and don't know why they gave it to me.
Mark Williams wrote:
Canon ink? Cheaper ink...????
The OP told us in his opening statement that he uses OEM ink.
I've encountered the same problem and put the curled film in plastic slide mounts. The mounts are the same thickness as the film holders that came with the scanner.
If that is a wild horse, then you've spent some time retouching it. I've been around many wild horses in Nevada, and their coats are always ungroomed and covered with scraps and scars. Near one of the I-80 rest stops in Northern Nevada, you would often see horses nearby. We were there when a tour bus showed up with Asian tourists. When they saw the horses, they were all out with their cameras. The tour guide had told them they were wild horses. When I told the guy they're not wild horses, he said, it doesn't matter.
I've been with Farmers insurance for forty-plus years. The times that I needed them, they were right there helping out. I rolled a vehicle in ninety-nine and had the funds to replace it within a week. My rates didn't go up because of it. I think you'll be happy with them.
Murray wrote:
Neither have I. Printer is Pro 100.
The ink purges are there and don't happen when the printer is idle. They're scheduled at 120 hours since it uses dye-based ink. You don't notice it because it waits until you ask it to print. Then if it's past the 120 hours, the printer will do a large purge before it prints. If you are in the process of printing and the 120 hours expires, the printer will do a large purge before the next print that you ask it to do. If you don't use the printer for double the 120 hours, it will trigger an even larger ink purge. Turning the printer on after the 120 hours expire will also start the scheduled purge. If you want to learn more about your printer have a look at this site.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLy-ZTSBwqckbpw44XPf4EExFGyRUtORFc