That won't work. You'll end up with an orange image. Scanning both as a negative would strip away the orange. But scanning them individuaslly and combining them will result in an orange image. But I doubt that either method will proiduce anything useful. You would still end up with whatever is on the fuji film, which is probably a cross-processed transparency image. I would suggest examining the cross-processed transparency images carefully. If there is nothing there of value, i would suggest relegating the film to the circular file. paul
> Jack Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >--- Mark Cassino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >> You can try sandwiching together a blank piece of > >> C41 film and your cross processed film, then scanning as > >> a color neg. The blank bit of film will re-introduce the > >> brown mask of the color negative film. > >> > >I've had film sandwich scans completely unusable due to Newton's > >Rings which will, at times, be produced where the two films do not > >meet. > > Why not scan the original and the blank negative separately and combine > them in Photoshop? > > -- > Mark Roberts > Photography and writing > www.robertstech.com >

