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Project:Smartphone medium format film scanner: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "== Why? == Medium format scanners are generally expensive! Some flatbed scanners (e.g. Epson V550/V600) can scan medium but they're also expensive and quite slow/fiddly. ==...")
 
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== Why? ==
== Why? ==


Medium format scanners are generally expensive! Some flatbed scanners (e.g. Epson V550/V600) can scan medium but they're also expensive and quite slow/fiddly.  
Dedicated medium format scanners are generally expensive! Some flatbed scanners (e.g. Epson V550/V600) can scan medium but they're also expensive and quite slow/fiddly.  


== Inspiration ==  
== Inspiration ==  
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* scanning 6x6 only (including a bit of the frame edge) but could be adapted to other formats
* scanning 6x6 only (including a bit of the frame edge) but could be adapted to other formats
* using with iPhone (other phones may work as well but may need height adjustment to fill the frame)
* using with iPhone (other phones may work as well but may need height adjustment to fill the frame)
== What does it look like? ==
<gallery>
File:IPhone_120_Scanner_1.jpg
File:IPhone 120 scanner 2.jpg
File:IPhone 120 scanner 3.jpg
</gallery>


== What do you need? ==  
== What do you need? ==  
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* LED video light for backlighting the film through the diffuser - something cheap like https://www.amazon.co.uk/Nanguang-CN-126-OrientEX-Camcorder-Panasonic/dp/B006OI3Z2M/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1465934504&sr=8-4&keywords=led+video+light (~£20)
* LED video light for backlighting the film through the diffuser - something cheap like https://www.amazon.co.uk/Nanguang-CN-126-OrientEX-Camcorder-Panasonic/dp/B006OI3Z2M/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1465934504&sr=8-4&keywords=led+video+light (~£20)
* Smartphone with high resolution camera (optimised for iPhone 6/6s/plus but should work with other phones)
* Smartphone with high resolution camera (optimised for iPhone 6/6s/plus but should work with other phones)
* (optionally) app dedicated to scanning film such as:
** Alternatively, you can take off the top panel and point a DSLR camera directly at the backlit film for very high resolution photos
* If you want to get negatives inverted directly on the phone, you need an app dedicated to scanning film such as:
** [https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/film-scanner-lite/id543847698?mt=8&uo=4&at=11l6hc&ct=fnd Film scanner lite (iOS)]
** [https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/film-scanner-lite/id543847698?mt=8&uo=4&at=11l6hc&ct=fnd Film scanner lite (iOS)]
** [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=dk.codeunited.helmut Helmut (Android)]
** [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=dk.codeunited.helmut Helmut (Android)]
* Otherwise you can use take a photo using the normal camera app (or an app like [http://campl.us/ Camera+] that can save TIFF files without JPEG compression), and invert photos later in Photoshop/Lightroom


Lasercut files to be uploaded.
Lasercut files to be uploaded.
== Quality ==
With an iPhone 6, you can get a 4MP picture (~2000x2000px) with a decent-enough resolution for sharing online.
With a Canon 70D DSLR, you can get a 10MP picture (~3200x3200px).
<gallery>
File:120 iPhone film scanner sample.jpeg|JPEG saved from Film Scanner Lite on iPhone 6, cropped, no further editing
File:120_scanner_with_DSLR.jpg|Shot in RAW with DSLR, cropped and edited in Lightroom
</gallery>