Unless you have the dough to get a lab scanner, it is a painful process to scan your own film. Luckily one day all the photo labs dumped their Pakon F-135 to the market, and I remember you could get one for ~$250 a pop. It was the best thing happened to those who want […]
Category Archives: open source
If you have a bunch of 35mm, 120, and even large format negatives lying around in your attic, slowly succumbing to the ravages of time, Ricoh has a solution for you. It’s their newest “film duplicator,” and it’ll let you digitize all that film using your DSLR or digital medium format camera. This isn’t the […]
If you shoot film and you don’t are much into chemicals, or don’t have a basement in which to keep a gigantic 5×7″ enlarger, you’ll soon end up with the need of a way to import those beautiful pictures you’ve taken on the computer. What? Why I didn’t say straight on “you will need a […]
Open source projecten trekken vaak mijn aandacht, het gedachtengoed van delen van informatie , daar worden we allemaal beter en slimmer van. Ik had nooit gedacht dat er in mijn vakgebied van digitaliseren van oude media ooit iets zou komen dat in die catagorie zou passen. Nu schetst mijn verbazing dat er iemand een apparaat […]