thank you for not gate keeping! i’ve always wanted to evolve to developing, scanning, and color correcting on my own but was always too scared. this made me feel better!
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
I have next to no experience in film, but watching you go through this process is so therapeutic- the difference between your scans & the lab's is wild -- love the style of your photos so much!
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :) ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞❤️
hey! i use the epson v600 too, but our menu’s look a little different. i recommend using professional mode if you can access that (i use a windows laptop so we might not have the same options) and the scanner should have come with a negative holder to make scanning easier. in professional mode you can also graphs to make sure you’re getting all the light valued which helps with editing later! i hope this helps a little
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
I process all my own Black and white at home, since the process can give varying results depending on developer used, dev times, temp. I let a local photo lab develop all my color negative film since the C-41 process is standardized and I really don't gain anything by processing with at home with kits. Then just scan everything at home and If I want prints, send them back to the photo lab lol Best of both
Honestly with all the technology these days, I totally would have never thought to scan my negatives. I used to love taking photos with real film. I’ve been trying to get back to the basics and I think for photography you’ve just kickstarted me in the direction I’d like to go! Definitely my catalyst! 🧡 Thanks for sharing😘😘
Love seeing this process. I really want to get into film, but am daunted by the process and expense. I feel like getting my own scanner and learning how to use it would make me more inclined to dive in. 📷
If you have never shot film before start with a roll of film and a camera. Then don't worry about scanning yet send it off to a lab. I have had good luck with the darkroom.
It really is easy. And it's a totally different experience from taking photos on digital or with a phone. I highly recommend trying film at least once. Your brain will love you for it
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
Highly recommend trying to shoot film and have a lab scan it for the first bit! I’d only worry about self scanning if you have enough money to not care, and want the best. Or, you shoot enough film that you’d pay for the film scanning equipment in savings from not getting lab scans!
I've been learning how to develop film in my schools darkroom which is different than developing at home but not by much. I highly recommend doing it, especially if you know someone who developes their own film and is willing to show you the ropes.
Thank you so much for this video. As someone who owns tons of slides and recently taking courses on analog photography, it’s amazing being able to do a little more with what I have on hand
things i wish i've realized earlier after years of trial and error: - the film scanner is your secondary camera and just like all cameras, they have their own characteristics and kinks. - the same goes to the actual inversion of the negative, result varies (assuming you don't manually invert your images) noritsu colors are different from lets say a fuji frontier or in your case a v600, which are all amazing and have their own "flavor". - the actual person scanning the negatives is also a factor. i had horror stories of seeing my roll being dragged across the floor after being dried by an intern. some labs lack the skill of handling negatives and actually make decent scans. there's only a handful of labs here in our area that knows what they are doing, which has forced me to go the same route like you. home scanning was fun until the colors look whack! ahahaha fun times i ended up with = lab develop + home scanning + negative lab pro just to save money since prices of film is rising by the minute :) sometimes i use old photos, or actual film frames from movie reels as reference for color etc.
Thank you for sharing your process! I've been wanting to get into scanning my own negatives but didn't really know how or where to start when it came to inverting the colors and editing. This is so helpful!
Start by forgetting you ever saw this video. Consider reading the manual that comes with your scanner. Don't scan the sprocket holes or other areas off of the film unless you want way more work in exchange for having images with sprocket holes in them.
Thank you for sharing your way of scanning and processing. I was about to buy Negative Lab Pro, but it simply just inverts and does minor adjustments to the curves, which one can simply do on his own. The only scanners that can best mimic the actual film's true colors are that of Frontier and one other (forgot the name), but even then there is a person who color corrects which in turn is yet another subjective way one edits film, which in fact points to that every single film photography will be interpreted differently.
Developing black and white is super easy that’s how I dove into developing at home. Just get cinestill monobath and a developing tank takes like 5 minutes. Need a dark bag also or a dark bathroom Edit; also negative lab pro is a plug-in through Lightroom so you can flip it with that then color correct with the sliders not flipped 🙏
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :) ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
regarding developing, you should just gor for it! it's not as complex as it seems. i initally learned in high school and managed not to destroy any film. plus, it's lots of fun!
It’s two years old but still the knowledge is relevant. Best to get proper film holders and raise the film on the scan bed a tad. Also look at the V850 or Canon scanners too (obsolete but you can still get pre owned and run drivers to use it). Nikon Coolscan 9000 is $2500 but offers true 4000DPI If money is no object then get a FujiFilm Frontier or a Drum scanner.
At 5:37 when the film scan result was a bit more blue and washed out, it might be because the film was put in with the emulsion side down? I cant tell if thats what it was or not, but maybe try flipping the film when you scan again. Try emulsion side up (dull side up) and glossy side down. I could be wrong though. I can't tell if you tried that already. Also love seeing this process :)
How about one year of my 4x5 B&W sheet film? That amounts to over 3000 sheets of film this year (2021) for ONLY my pleasure. I exposed 22,000 sheets of Fujichrome 4x5 for customers last year and 6300 sheets of Fujichrome 8X10 last year, mainly of sporting goods products but also of garbage trucks and utility truck chassis made here in Tulsa. Fujichrome is what the art directors want, so that is what I provide, all taken in studio with electronic flash. If you call an old warehouse a studio-but I can pull trucks inside it and mock-up a bowling alley in it. I don't scan film, I make byarta silver enlargements, usually 16x20 or 20x24 but occasionally larger even from 645 negatives. One can "scan" negatives very well with a good light box and a DSLR (16 MEG+) with a macro lens.
What you could do to get rid of the dust is download SilverFast which is actually free if you own a v550 and I believe its also free for your scanner just go on epson's website. SilverFast has an infrared thing which removes all the dust and scratch. Try it out! Loved the way you converted the colors I've never seen anyone do that, I use Negative Lab Pro but that works great and you save money too!
I’m an old film photographer who worked as one in the Army. I’m glad to see you doing film. Developing film isn’t hard, it’s easy to do if you have the right equipment. I started with color then switched to B&W. I also do prints the old way with an enlarger, but scanning is fine. Half of photography is done in the darkroom or in your case on the computer. I was curious do you only use a point and shoot camera or also use an SLR camera?
Great video! The only thing I would point out is that if your air blower doesn't have a dust filter inside you're basically just blasting air and dust on the scanner. There are many good option with filtration which should get rid of the problem
one day I would love to invest in scanning and developing my own film. I already spend so much money on the film rolls, $29.99 for 3 rolls, and I go to a Walgreens near me but to print one film roll is $20. I use my film cameras A LOT, so it adds up!
Great comparison... It never occurred to me I could save costs by scanning at home... but then again, the lab results are spectacular! I now wonder how much of a difference does a bad development job do.
I finally have the time to start taking film photos. I love your film photography content. Your videos really inspired me and I can't wait to learn more and finally be able to use my mom's more professional film camera.
Thanks for the tip to invert the photo’s yourself, I just bought that same scanner and my scans turned out really different from some prints I have from the film, and I couldn’t get the colors quite right in Photoshop. I’m gonna try to set the settings to positive as well.
Nice video. I just got more into developing/scanning myself and the whole process is a little overwhelming since I want to get scans that are true to the film look as I am trying to compare different film stocks. It was nice to see your full process. Liked/subscribed.
should definitely check out negative lab pro !! Try out their free trial, works as a plugin on top of lightroom and will defini make your scans even nicer :)
Love this video! Have you heard of Negative Lab Pro? I bought the same scanner last year and bit the bullet and bought the NLP software too--- and my scans are way better than the Epson Scan scans. Felt like I wasn't getting the best possible image with just the scanner's software. I think there is a free trial, you should try it out :) Keep up the great work!!
Interesting process inverting with LR...will give it a try. Cinestill is a tricky one to scan. Also, you can totally develop film at home. I find it easier to do C41 than Black and White. Just get a sous vide to control the temperature and you are on your way. I find it really satisfying to develop and scan myself.
Wow! You really inspired me to do my own scanning. This is definitely something I’d love to try in the future, and if I will, I’ll come back to this video for sure. Thanks for sharing.
I watched that intro numerous times! Totally healthy I'd say!😂 I don't actually know what to call it though, but the time lapses you showed the photos you'd taken was refreshing and kinda wholesome-ish. Your videos are really inspiring, Audrie!
Dang, I didn't know you had to remove the scanner cover...maybe that's why my negatives always turned out bad when I was editing in LR. Very helpful vid, subbed and thank you!
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :) ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
Have you tried Negative Lab Pro for your negative inversion? With its latest update you're able to convert an entire roll with the press of the button plus it gives you a ton of color control. I use it all the time and it saves me so much time.
the film holders are there because the scanners focal point is a bit further from the surface, meaning that if you put it directly onto your scanner your scans won’t be as sharp
I used to have a working Nikon Coolscanner 4000 but it broke. The process was slow but the quality was pretty good. So decided to try my Epson 3170 and the results were decent from what I remember. It's been over 2 years since I've scanned any film so can't remember exactly. I do remember wanting to get that film scanner device that Nikon makes. I think the process might be faster than scanning.
Nice video, you should check out Andrew's Analog Service Center which is a film lab in Pennsylvania. They offer developing and scanning for one incredibly low price. I love getting getting my film developed their because they are budget friendly and the quality is awesome. I tried using the Epson v600 back in the day to save some money and there is way too much image noise in the scans. Anyway thanks for the video!
Considering your passion for analogous photography you should use a dedicated film scanner (eg. Plustek) to get a much better quality, your Epson isn't capable to generate HQ scans, especially 35mm.
You should try and get a Nikon Coolscan, for example the LS-40. Personally I don't like using flatbed scanners for 35mm. But I understand they are cheaper of course...
Idk when this video came out but you should start developing your film yourself. I did this like 2 month ago and it´s still like magic to me. Get the cinestill chemicals and follow a youtube tutorial. It is really simple. Oh and get "negative lab pro" for LightRoomClassic :)
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :) ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
1) love that you’re a woman!!!! I need more women photographers to follow on RUclips 2) love that you’re showing all this background work. I’m learning so much 3) love that you’re shooting film😭💕🥹
Really enjoyed to see how you go about scanning your film. I have been thinking about doing the same for a while! I'm still saving up since I wanna dive into dslr scanning. However, I already started to develop film by myself and I totally recommend you to do the same. Just start with BW Film, it's quite easy and super rewarding!
Hey that is a really motivating one! 😎 Just started looking for scanners and also came to the epson 600 or 850 as well as some by Reflecta like the x33 but they usually limited to 35mm film. I wonder: what resolution do you choose to get out of the scans that you liked - playing with the dpi? 😅
thank you for not gate keeping! i’ve always wanted to evolve to developing, scanning, and color correcting on my own but was always too scared. this made me feel better!
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
I do love Jesus, and film photography too. Can I ask why is that consider sinning?
@@Colewnm it’s not❤️ I guess it’s just a daily reminder
I have next to no experience in film, but watching you go through this process is so therapeutic- the difference between your scans & the lab's is wild -- love the style of your photos so much!
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞❤️
This is such a beautiful hobby I love how the pictures came out 😍
❤️❤️❤️
@@AudrieStorme what camera did you use i want to get into photography so badly 🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
@@AudrieStorme i just take pictures on my phone ,....!"
hey! i use the epson v600 too, but our menu’s look a little different. i recommend using professional mode if you can access that (i use a windows laptop so we might not have the same options) and the scanner should have come with a negative holder to make scanning easier. in professional mode you can also graphs to make sure you’re getting all the light valued which helps with editing later! i hope this helps a little
Developing your film at home is much less scary than it seems. Go for it! However I am also 100% behind supporting photo labs lol❤️
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
@@JESUSistheTRUTH-ROBLOX shut up
I process all my own Black and white at home, since the process can give varying results depending on developer used, dev times, temp. I let a local photo lab develop all my color negative film since the C-41 process is standardized and I really don't gain anything by processing with at home with kits. Then just scan everything at home and If I want prints, send them back to the photo lab lol
Best of both
the red streak is so satisfying! Much better than the cleaner version.
Honestly with all the technology these days, I totally would have never thought to scan my negatives. I used to love taking photos with real film. I’ve been trying to get back to the basics and I think for photography you’ve just kickstarted me in the direction I’d like to go! Definitely my catalyst! 🧡
Thanks for sharing😘😘
NEGATIVE LAB PRO! Hands down the best thing you can get if you want to scan your own negatives. You absolutely have to get it.
Love seeing this process. I really want to get into film, but am daunted by the process and expense. I feel like getting my own scanner and learning how to use it would make me more inclined to dive in. 📷
If you have never shot film before start with a roll of film and a camera. Then don't worry about scanning yet send it off to a lab. I have had good luck with the darkroom.
Hi! I just created a video giving a breakdown of the expense and how to get started. Hope this helps! ruclips.net/video/kzSlfqnAXeY/видео.html
It really is easy. And it's a totally different experience from taking photos on digital or with a phone. I highly recommend trying film at least once. Your brain will love you for it
There’s a holy GOD in Heaven, Who created you and I for His glory, but our sins have separated us from Him. the wages of sin is DEATH, but the FREE Gift of GOD is eternal life in CHRIST the LORD. CHRIST died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. repent, stop living in sin, and believe in the Gospel.
Highly recommend trying to shoot film and have a lab scan it for the first bit! I’d only worry about self scanning if you have enough money to not care, and want the best. Or, you shoot enough film that you’d pay for the film scanning equipment in savings from not getting lab scans!
Is super cool that she finally got a printer for her films 🎞 I adore her aesthetic style 🥺💕✨
🥲❤️
I've been learning how to develop film in my schools darkroom which is different than developing at home but not by much. I highly recommend doing it, especially if you know someone who developes their own film and is willing to show you the ropes.
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html
I can't watch stopping you...
You are such a fairy living in heaven...
been scanning my work through silverfast for 2 years and I just learned something new here.
Interesting seeing your scans vs the lab scans. Makes me think what the true colors of certain film really are.
love following your journey with film. your pictures are beautiful✨
Thank you 🥺
I love the aesthetics of your pictures
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html
Thank you so much for this video. As someone who owns tons of slides and recently taking courses on analog photography, it’s amazing being able to do a little more with what I have on hand
That was the most beautiful thing ive ever seen ive been holding on to rolls of film i was planning on bringing to developer but i wanna do this now
things i wish i've realized earlier after years of trial and error:
- the film scanner is your secondary camera and just like all cameras, they have their own characteristics and kinks.
- the same goes to the actual inversion of the negative, result varies (assuming you don't manually invert your images) noritsu colors are different from lets say a fuji frontier or in your case a v600, which are all amazing and have their own "flavor".
- the actual person scanning the negatives is also a factor. i had horror stories of seeing my roll being dragged across the floor after being dried by an intern. some labs lack the skill of handling negatives and actually make decent scans. there's only a handful of labs here in our area that knows what they are doing, which has forced me to go the same route like you. home scanning was fun until the colors look whack! ahahaha fun times
i ended up with = lab develop + home scanning + negative lab pro just to save money since prices of film is rising by the minute :)
sometimes i use old photos, or actual film frames from movie reels as reference for color etc.
manual inversion is a really great technique!
Give Negative Lab Pro a try, I think you’re gonna love it 😊 it allows you to pull more out of the same negative
I watched many videos on scanning film and not gonna lie your method is by far the best I've seen. thank you
Wow! Your voice is so calming !
Fascinating! I don't photograph with film myself but this is quite interesting!
The scanning noise feels nostalgic for some reason. Love it!
Bringing you back in time
Thank you for sharing your process! I've been wanting to get into scanning my own negatives but didn't really know how or where to start when it came to inverting the colors and editing. This is so helpful!
So happy it was helpful! I’m still getting the hang of it so I didn’t want to call this a tutorial 😅 but thanks for watching ❤️❤️
Start by forgetting you ever saw this video. Consider reading the manual that comes with your scanner. Don't scan the sprocket holes or other areas off of the film unless you want way more work in exchange for having images with sprocket holes in them.
Thank you for sharing your way of scanning and processing. I was about to buy Negative Lab Pro, but it simply just inverts and does minor adjustments to the curves, which one can simply do on his own. The only scanners that can best mimic the actual film's true colors are that of Frontier and one other (forgot the name), but even then there is a person who color corrects which in turn is yet another subjective way one edits film, which in fact points to that every single film photography will be interpreted differently.
Developing black and white is super easy that’s how I dove into developing at home. Just get cinestill monobath and a developing tank takes like 5 minutes. Need a dark bag also or a dark bathroom
Edit; also negative lab pro is a plug-in through Lightroom so you can flip it with that then color correct with the sliders not flipped 🙏
this is the best video I found on this topic, beautifully explained
i love your vlog, lots of knowledge about film and analog camera, damn because i'm a newbie.
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
Thanks for some chill transparency
regarding developing, you should just gor for it! it's not as complex as it seems. i initally learned in high school and managed not to destroy any film. plus, it's lots of fun!
I love this. Saw this on tiktok and came to check the full story. WIll do with my family's old film, I'm sure we have some.
It’s two years old but still the knowledge is relevant.
Best to get proper film holders and raise the film on the scan bed a tad. Also look at the V850 or Canon scanners too (obsolete but you can still get pre owned and run drivers to use it). Nikon Coolscan 9000 is $2500 but offers true 4000DPI
If money is no object then get a FujiFilm Frontier or a Drum scanner.
Have an amazing day and good mornings!
great video! straight to the point!
At 5:37 when the film scan result was a bit more blue and washed out, it might be because the film was put in with the emulsion side down? I cant tell if thats what it was or not, but maybe try flipping the film when you scan again. Try emulsion side up (dull side up) and glossy side down. I could be wrong though. I can't tell if you tried that already.
Also love seeing this process :)
How about one year of my 4x5 B&W sheet film? That amounts to over 3000 sheets of film this year (2021) for ONLY my pleasure. I exposed 22,000 sheets of Fujichrome 4x5 for customers last year and 6300 sheets of Fujichrome 8X10 last year, mainly of sporting goods products but also of garbage trucks and utility truck chassis made here in Tulsa. Fujichrome is what the art directors want, so that is what I provide, all taken in studio with electronic flash. If you call an old warehouse a studio-but I can pull trucks inside it and mock-up a bowling alley in it. I don't scan film, I make byarta silver enlargements, usually 16x20 or 20x24 but occasionally larger even from 645 negatives. One can "scan" negatives very well with a good light box and a DSLR (16 MEG+) with a macro lens.
Respect
The cinematography 😍
What you could do to get rid of the dust is download SilverFast which is actually free if you own a v550 and I believe its also free for your scanner just go on epson's website. SilverFast has an infrared thing which removes all the dust and scratch. Try it out!
Loved the way you converted the colors I've never seen anyone do that, I use Negative Lab Pro but that works great and you save money too!
I’m an old film photographer who worked as one in the Army. I’m glad to see you doing film.
Developing film isn’t hard, it’s easy to do if you have the right equipment. I started with color then switched to B&W. I also do prints the old way with an enlarger, but scanning is fine. Half of photography is done in the darkroom or in your case on the computer.
I was curious do you only use a point and shoot camera or also use an SLR camera?
Thank you for sharing your talent and creative approach to this. So fun and educational watching your videos.
Love this. Definitely getting a scanner myself.
Great video! The only thing I would point out is that if your air blower doesn't have a dust filter inside you're basically just blasting air and dust on the scanner. There are many good option with filtration which should get rid of the problem
one day I would love to invest in scanning and developing my own film. I already spend so much money on the film rolls, $29.99 for 3 rolls, and I go to a Walgreens near me but to print one film roll is $20. I use my film cameras A LOT, so it adds up!
Great comparison... It never occurred to me I could save costs by scanning at home... but then again, the lab results are spectacular! I now wonder how much of a difference does a bad development job do.
Thank you for this video! Getting my v600 soon so can't wait to play around with it
I finally have the time to start taking film photos. I love your film photography content. Your videos really inspired me and I can't wait to learn more and finally be able to use my mom's more professional film camera.
You saved my life! thank you
the cinestill is blue because it's balanced for accurate negatives/colors under warm Tungsten light (hence 800T)
Awesome. The type of video I was looking for.
Beautiful pictures!! 💝Also, thank you for the important information on film and lightning.
You’re so welcome! Thanks for learning along with me heheh
Thanks for the tip to invert the photo’s yourself, I just bought that same scanner and my scans turned out really different from some prints I have from the film, and I couldn’t get the colors quite right in Photoshop. I’m gonna try to set the settings to positive as well.
Nice video. I just got more into developing/scanning myself and the whole process is a little overwhelming since I want to get scans that are true to the film look as I am trying to compare different film stocks. It was nice to see your full process. Liked/subscribed.
should definitely check out negative lab pro !! Try out their free trial, works as a plugin on top of lightroom and will defini make your scans even nicer :)
I love the refrigerator drawer dedicated to your film stash!! I couldn't get away with this...that's my husband's cheese drawer 🤣
would love to see you do this with some B&W scans!
I haven’t even tried any b&w films tbh 😹 I’ll get there eventually
@@AudrieStorme just wait till you get to slide films!
Love this video! Have you heard of Negative Lab Pro? I bought the same scanner last year and bit the bullet and bought the NLP software too--- and my scans are way better than the Epson Scan scans. Felt like I wasn't getting the best possible image with just the scanner's software. I think there is a free trial, you should try it out :) Keep up the great work!!
Interesting process inverting with LR...will give it a try. Cinestill is a tricky one to scan. Also, you can totally develop film at home. I find it easier to do C41 than Black and White. Just get a sous vide to control the temperature and you are on your way. I find it really satisfying to develop and scan myself.
Wow! You really inspired me to do my own scanning. This is definitely something I’d love to try in the future, and if I will, I’ll come back to this video for sure. Thanks for sharing.
I watched that intro numerous times! Totally healthy I'd say!😂 I don't actually know what to call it though, but the time lapses you showed the photos you'd taken was refreshing and kinda wholesome-ish. Your videos are really inspiring, Audrie!
Aaaah film just makes my heart warm. I would love love to try to scan my own film too! love the videoooo❤️
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html 📸
Incredible video, new follower from Colombia!
OH MU GOD THIS VIDEO Is so amazing and inspiring 🥺❤️🩹
love this video so much!!
explains everything soo good and inspires to start filming right away:)
Dang, I didn't know you had to remove the scanner cover...maybe that's why my negatives always turned out bad when I was editing in LR. Very helpful vid, subbed and thank you!
nice video! It was great to see the difference between the photo lab and yours! Would love to see more film content, really cool, thanks!
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
Get negative lab pro. It makes scanning color negatives way easier.
Feel so inspired to buy a scanner now ✨️
Great video Audrie!!!!!
You can do most of the colour editing within the epson software which will resuly in a better scan before editing in lightroom.
omg watching your video and we go to the same photo lab!
Have you tried Negative Lab Pro for your negative inversion? With its latest update you're able to convert an entire roll with the press of the button plus it gives you a ton of color control. I use it all the time and it saves me so much time.
Love film 🎞 🤍🤏🏼
You never fail to amaze me 🌈
🥺🥺🥺❤️❤️❤️
I've also seen people taking photos of their negative with their dslr (maybe this is also an option vs scanning)
the film holders are there because the scanners focal point is a bit further from the surface, meaning that if you put it directly onto your scanner your scans won’t be as sharp
I used to have a working Nikon Coolscanner 4000 but it broke. The process was slow but the quality was pretty good. So decided to try my Epson 3170 and the results were decent from what I remember. It's been over 2 years since I've scanned any film so can't remember exactly. I do remember wanting to get that film scanner device that Nikon makes. I think the process might be faster than scanning.
Nice video, you should check out Andrew's Analog Service Center which is a film lab in Pennsylvania. They offer developing and scanning for one incredibly low price. I love getting getting my film developed their because they are budget friendly and the quality is awesome. I tried using the Epson v600 back in the day to save some money and there is way too much image noise in the scans. Anyway thanks for the video!
Considering your passion for analogous photography you should use a dedicated film scanner (eg. Plustek) to get a much better quality, your Epson isn't capable to generate HQ scans, especially 35mm.
35mm is beautiful. We got away from some of these good things when the electronic age hit.
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html
Your intro totally smacks! How did make it?!
You should try and get a Nikon Coolscan, for example the LS-40. Personally I don't like using flatbed scanners for 35mm. But I understand they are cheaper of course...
I loved this video too much!!🔝🔝🔝🔥🔥🔥🔥
Idk when this video came out but you should start developing your film yourself. I did this like 2 month ago and it´s still like magic to me. Get the cinestill chemicals and follow a youtube tutorial. It is really simple. Oh and get "negative lab pro" for LightRoomClassic :)
I like the light leak tho 😩
It was a scan line and not a light leak 😅 still pretty cool though
amazing thanks !
Love this super kool 🎉
Loved this video !
Hello i uploaded a film photo walk on my channel! check it out if youre into film :)
ruclips.net/video/TRmBCYjwvXs/видео.html my soon to be content is about film! 📸🎞
1) love that you’re a woman!!!! I need more women photographers to follow on RUclips
2) love that you’re showing all this background work. I’m learning so much
3) love that you’re shooting film😭💕🥹
Really enjoyed to see how you go about scanning your film. I have been thinking about doing the same for a while! I'm still saving up since I wanna dive into dslr scanning. However, I already started to develop film by myself and I totally recommend you to do the same. Just start with BW Film, it's quite easy and super rewarding!
how did you start learning to develop your own film?
1:51 , the error in scanning caused that photo to have a different story, with the man looking upwards towards the streak
How cool!
wait we literally go to the same photo lab that just caught me so off guard haha
Your video was aesthetically pleasing to watch. Also, what camera do you use, which model is it?
How can I purposefully get my photos like scan 1 ?
I have the same Scanner, I got a software silverfast free just use your scanner serial no. It works a lot better. Give it a try.
It's brilliant!!!
❤️❤️❤️
Hey that is a really motivating one! 😎 Just started looking for scanners and also came to the epson 600 or 850 as well as some by Reflecta like the x33 but they usually limited to 35mm film.
I wonder: what resolution do you choose to get out of the scans that you liked - playing with the dpi? 😅
What photo lab did you go to for that car scan? (@ 7:40)
The photo lab one looks amazing and is exactly the style I’m going for.