35mm or MF? You can get a 35mm dedicated scanner quite cheap these days,
the low-end Konica Minolta's are pretty good and below $300 if you can
find one new.
-Adam
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hmmm. Good scans are going to set you back a bunch. The scans you get from a
typical mini lab might not be adequate for professional work. Perhaps it's time
to jump.
Paul
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Scott Loveless" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
So I landed a job doing some interior and exterior architectural
shots, plus some staff portraits and candids of the daily grind for a
local company. (Actually, it's a national chain, but I'm only doing
one branch.) As most of you know, I'm kind of a Luddite and have
refused to jump into the digital realm with both feet. Of course,
they don't want prints. They want about 50 photos on CD to use for
promotional purposes - their own stock photos, basically. ARRRRGH!
Looks like I'll be paying the lab to scan the film.
Such is life.
--
Scott (dammit) Loveless
http://www.twosixteen.com
--
"You have to hold the button down" -Arnold Newman