I built a perfect home film scanner
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 18 дек 2023
- IG - / jessesenko
Here's the 3d Printer file for the film holder. I just printed the part i needed - www.thingiverse.com/thing:437...
This is the lens I ended up getting for my scanner - geni.us/mZwa
And I put it on this - geni.us/21qPkB
You could use this as a backlight - geni.us/EBsY5
This is the ball head I have EVERYWHERE - geni.us/spcbfEV
A really helpful mounting arm - geni.us/RBnCRO
Mounting plate for magic arms - geni.us/Y4z7Es
This is what I shoot most of my channel video on - geni.us/KU0vT
With this lens - geni.us/qz6LR
And this filter - geni.us/43jo3SO
You don't need an expensive mic - geni.us/FjFYQ
And this is my fav cheap micro tripod - geni.us/nW71M
This the best light for a talking head - we call it SpongeBob - geni.us/940csq
BUT this with a softbox might be all you need to save some $$ - geni.us/hjUI1JJ
This is my new favourite hard light for my tabletop setup - geni.us/ooMgi
I love this rolling stand for shooting around my studio - geni.us/NSQQQL
Screw this on a plywood scrap to hold your light on the floor or a tabletop - geni.us/qup5VRP
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
My favourite source for music - bit.ly/2XHUo2O
Let me know if/how you scan!
VIEWER FEEDBACK: use a mirror on the table to make sure that your camera is pointing straight down
Use the enlarger film holder rather than making one! 🤦♂️
Mirror trick: 🤯. I love this community!
It depends on how much quality you want. I use a slide holder that attaches to the end of a macro lens. the connection between the holder and filter thread is rigid so once I have focus, everything is good. keep the emulsion side away from the lens for consistent focusing. keep your light source as far away from the film as possible to make it even across the image. Make sure your film is clean. Otherwise you will spend all your time cloning dust of your digitzed image and no, the dust and scratches filter will not remove all the dust.
".....and my God, you'd better have a library card....." Priceless......what a brilliant, inspirational video.
Quick tip for levelling the camera. Put a mirror on the base and adjust the camera until the reflection of the lens is in the middle of the viewfinder. oops, sorry Giovanni - you beat me to it, but good point, this sets the camera regardless of whether the base is level or not.
This is incredible and makes perfect sense!
🤣 "I make myself cry…I inspire myself so much sometimes…" 🤣 …You're a comedy genius, as well as a photographic one!…Fantastic video.
The camera alignment using the ball head should be done with a mirror, by focusing on the lens and centering it on the frame trough the reflection. That being because it will guarantee that it is co-planar with the scanning surface, what is more important than having it leveled.
🤯 Amazing! Makes perfect sense! I've never heard of this. Definitely going to update my method.
I don’t shoot film, nor do I think I ever will, however, I am filled with inspiration after watching this. Your creativity and unique approach to work makes me want to make things.
Thanks! How bout you shoot a roll of film and I write a song?
You DDDD DON'T shoot film. Horror! (LOL) I use both and a phone camera. The diference between film and digital is like the difference between CD and Vynal. The real beauty of film is that it can be expensive, which makes one think before one opens a firing salvo.
Every once I like to record to tape and reel 2 reel every once in a while. I have to agree, I am almost always more thoughtful when doing that vs going directly to my hard drive on the computer!@@georgesmith4509
I hear you loud and clear!
What a hoot! Dude - your timing for this rig is perfect for me. And that sly, dry humour… priceless!
The humor, the down to earth vibe and, why not, also the useful content! Sub'd; keep it up!
Dude. Love your story telling. So captivating. 👌🏾
Your delivery and humor is extremely perfect. Great stuff 👍🏻👍🏻
Thanks Andy! Means a lot!
My sentiments exactly !! Subbd for the great humour and great vdo'graphy !!
Valoi Easy35 = ultimate option, cause it attaches to the lens = perfectly parallel sensor every time.
Yeah I get pushed ads for this all the time. Just wanted to see what I could do with what I have. And I’m finding that getting it parallel is not difficult and can scale up to 120 film easily.
@@jessesenko Oh, I know. I have used camera conversion since before it was a thing. I measure my processing time in minutes and futzing with setting up anything takes time. I aim to scan my 35mm film in 5 minutes or less per-roll. I have limited workspace, and a resolution of 50+mp. Any misalignment in the sensor shows up. My 35mm rolls go Jobo -> drying -> tethered camera+Easy35 -> NAS -> Filmlabapp Desktop v3 tif -> DxO tweaks. I can do 6+ rolls per hour of 35mm, almost no dust thanks to the static brush on the Valoi. I still use an old copy stand and EFHv3 for 120, which is slower and eats desk space. I hope sometime soon for an "Easy120" or knock-off to appear so I can permanently decommission the copy stand.
Also worth noting - I use the Easy35 in my "Jobo closet" in the basement with an old laptop, right where the film dries. For the copy stand I have to transport the film two floors up to my office. No matter how careful, that results in more dust.
At any rate, you've certainly got a solid setup there. I wasn't meaning to sound like an advertisement🤣 I got my copy stand on clearance for $80, used 3D printed film holders, and my existing el-cheapo light table. That setup still performed better conversions than any lab.
Now I'm just super excited with the continuing evolution. Eliminating the Adobe tax, swapping in new components, etc. these last few years... it's almost to the point where I don't mind the conversion work at all.
Very cool. I have an old enlarger gathering dust, a son with a 3D printer, and I have a bunch of negatives that need to be scanned. Happy days ahead.
you could have mounted the enlarger 'sideways' so that it's 'projection' is parallel to a table,
- used its own film carriers, and
- substituted a "daylight" led bulb for the original incandescent lamp,
- set up the camera and macro lens pointing "into" the enlarger
- or, even better, use a good quality enlarger lens, mounted in an adapter to your camera body (e.g. an extension tube, with an adapter "ring" epoxied to it... i suggest this because the enlarger lens is "flat field", although an excellent macro lens might be better at 1:1, {the enlarger lens optimized for 1:10 ratio, more likely (like 8x10 or 11x14, from 35 mm film}
Anyway, the enlarger already has a film carrier setup for 35 mm & 220 (your Durst), and a light source optimized for even lighting, and you only need to make a mount for the camera, which would be fixed in one of two places, for 35 mm and 120, just thr focusing distance from film plane.
ok, "it's just a thought"
Lol. this is great and i never considered that at all. Where were you a week ago?? Trying to figure this stuff out in a vacuum over here. Film carrier was sitting there all along. I wonder if removing the lens and just inverting my current setup would have been a good option too... essentially a free lightbox with an LED upgraded backlight.
If i'm following, you're suggesting to build an adapter set to essentially mount my camera to the lens and focus directly on the sensor?
I was wondering why you were not using the standard film carrier too!
I have several carriers up to 4X5 and turning the enlarger on it's side like mentioned above, then removing the lens mount board should to the same thing. Depending on the enlarger a diffusion piece might be needed but should be easy to do. If "scanning" B&W negs, the type of bulb should not matter much, with color negs it would. Using the same process and a daylight bulb you should also be able to "scan" slides then reverse it in you photo processing software.
100% seeing that now. Maybe i'm just stubborn, but i feel like i'll end up using this for recording top-down video and scanning random business docs too with my arca swiss iphone mount. @@JustMe-bp6im
Excellent. Just found your channel, so I’m a little late to this comment thread. Your Durst enlarger was made to convert to a copy stand, but not all enlargers will do this easily. I own a copy stand and intend to do what you’re doing with that. Also, a good light source, negative carriers, and multiple macro lenses, so I’m all set.
Just two days ago, I had a conversation with a guy who owns a local photo lab (yes, they still exist) and he was telling me that I could not do this successfully. I figured he was partially full of it and just wanting me to pay him to scan my negatives. I have thousands! (Been doing this since the 1960s).
Cheers!
😃
I had a camera store guy try to talk me out of a camera I was looking for and told me what was “better” Just picked what I was looking for up :)
forget the 3d printed holder - I used my old negative carrier from my enlarger, made a mask which covered most of the light panel, and just dropped that carrier onto the surface.
Nice! Yeah, you can tell i haven't printed in a while and totally missed that connection, lol
My new favorite channel
Ah hahaha. The whole confusing two parts of my past bit was hilarious. Not going to shoot film again anytime soon but have rolls and rolls of 120 negatives and 35mm slides that probably should be digitized before I get too much older. Thanks for the laughs and the video. Subscribed.
I've been doing that for the last month or so. Many great memories. I use my R8 Canon with EF50 macro lens and cheap kodak light box with some old Epson scanner film holders which work great. Do everything from 110 to 35mm to 120 and 4x5.
Oh man, that enlarger made my dive into my local marketplace website and there's a couple of them for sale for next to nothing. Going to pick one up soon!
Beautiful work, I really appreciate the inspiration you posses,thank you.
Thanks for watching, Philip!
i like that the nut hanging from a screw is just a hommade plumbob
I like that it lands flat! Even if I don’t need it anymore. Comments gave me a better way
Subscribed just because of the red light anecdote. Actually for the scanning ideas. Thanks.
Great video! Glad I discovered your channel - something different in photography . Thank you! 🇨🇦
Glad you’re here!
Amazing!
Loved so much in this and made me laugh out loud! the Red Light District references and then the riding crop! LMAO!
Now I need to go get my enlarger out of storage and see if it will work.
I've been tempted to salvage the lens from it and adapt it to be used as a camera lens, some of those lenses are actually really good and make crazy images. Use it all with no waste!
Glad you enjoyed it!
one of the best videos i have ever seen on youtube, wow!!!!
I'm in the process of cleaning out old slides. They were taken by a relative of my wife and she inherited them. We went through thousands of slides (there! A tree! Another one! A flower!) and kept a handful for scanning.
The contraption I use involves; a Nikon Coolpix P7700, inherited from the same person who took the slides, a medical daylight LED panel as a backlight, cut out cardboard to keep out stray light, a mini tripod that allows to point the camera straight down and another cardboard contraption to lift the backlight plus slide to the range of the camera's makro setting. Voila!
This is good enough for me, even though the scans get blurry on th edges (a combination of the lenses limits and the slides not being completely plane in their frames).
Thanks for showing your process!
Thanks for sharing. You used the word “contraption” a few times so it sounds like my kind of setup!
You randomly popped up in my feed today. Instant sub! Thank you for your videos; I can't wait to see more.
Thank you!
very cool, will do this setup this year
This was fantastic! I have an old enlarger sitting around that would be perfect for this. Thank you so much for posting this and the inspiration to get it done.
Awesome! Thanks! Some good suggestions in other comments too if you do it!
The DSLR scanning method is fantastic. My setup is not too different from yours (also use an enlarger) but the results blow away the scans from my previous Nikon scanner
Yup, I'm just getting this setup going, but the scans are so much better than anything i've tried since i paid a bunch of money to scan some film on an Imacon back in the early 2000s.
Really enjoyable watch and cool final setup!
You INSPIRED me to rethink how to design, create & build my own Film & Slide Scanner from items within my own reach. Thank you for making this video just for me. OK, for other DIY'rs out there, also!
Been waiting so long for you to watch it!
Easier way of making sure your camera is level with the film plane is to use a mirror. Just place a mirror on the plane and then aim at the center of the reflection. That takes into account any deviation of the plane too so its not reliant just on gravity.
A few people have said that and today is that day i picked up a completely fundamental thing that i've never heard of. A good day! Thanks for sharing.
this is so great!
great filmmaking. Your Videos look amazing. Great Work!
Thanks!
haha-loved it!
I still have my Super chromemga C760. I miss the days of 100' of Tri-x or TMax for $20-$30.00 though. Also, my developer of choice can no longer be found. Agfa Diafine and Acufine.
Made the same thing 2 years ago and then proceed to slowly upgrade the kit. I love fine tuning every bit of it !
Oh very cool. I've done lots of janky temporary setups, but excited to keep this one ready-to-go. I gotta buy this lens now though 😬
Informative...and entertaining! Thanks.
Hilarious presentation Jesse! Turned out great!
Thanks for the loaner lens, Terry!
Brilliant and hilarious! Loving yer work, Jesse. I’ve been using a V600 flatbed and never liked it. I do have a spare enlarger and will give this a go. But first I’m getting a library card.
lol. Library card shaming seems to be working :) I borrowed a V600 for a bit and felt it was pretty soft. This method is so much sharper if you have a macro lens. Also lots of comments about using the neg carrier from the enlarger instead of 3D printing one. Good luck and thanks for watching!
We need more content like this, it’s about way of thinking and inspiration first of all. Never shot film till 2023 and already have few cameras from 60-90s and developed around 10 bnw rolls
Ideas first always! You've shot more film than me this year! I've got a new camera i need to replace the seals on and hope to shoot a bunch over the holidays.
Jesse, this is fantastic. Here's to more film in 2024!
Agree! An admirable resolution!
The single best change I made to my copy stand + DSLR scanning setup was shooting tethered in lightroom. Being able to nail macro focus using my monitor instead of my camera's live display was a huge revelation and helped massively with setup.
I also use an enlarging lens and switching from extension tubes to a macro rail was another huge help.
Tethering is great. I have a bunch of slides to do so will probably tether for that.
This is a great video and reminder of something I was going to do when I retired (3 years ago). I used to work at the library and still volunteer there, but I didn't know they had a 3-d printer. This is revolutionary. I also have a film camera collection starting in 1969 along with some digital Barbie cameras my girls had. I guess I need a decent digital camera with a macro lens. My dad shot slides back in the 50s as did I in the 70s. I transitioned to prints in the 80s, so I have a metric ton of stuff to scan.
Cool, thanks for sharing! You'll have to ask and see if your local branch has a 3d printer, but the library my son works at does here in Canada. This sort of setup is great for scanning all kinds of things, including prints or documents. I have a feeling i'll go through all of my parents' old slides soon.
I just managed to shot one roll of film with my grandmother old Yashica 127 . I am not going to pay 22 euros to get the film scanned with the sprockets. Thank you for the inspiration and the guidelines!
Amazing and entertaining content!
Awesome! I have an old Yashica TLR as well and I love it.
Have you had any prior experience scanning 35mm film with sprockets and edges?
@@jessesenko
After I watched your video I realized I have a lot of the equipment you described and I have tried this belore and the results were ok, but the fact of being able to 3d print a negative holder is a game changer... I have some color photos of my wedding back in1983 that are looking (are) faded. I did scan them but never really was happy with the look I'm going to try and find those negatives and use your method to get them back into their original look.
I found that the lens is the important part of the chain. If you don’t have a good macro, the scans will be soft.
@@jessesenko I do have a canon macro so hopefully that will work. Gotta find the negatives first 😀😀
Great information nicely done and super entertaining!
Fantastic vid, entertaining and inspiring
Thank you!
Thank you thank you thank you!!!!! A perfect tutorial video.
I’m so happy to be old enough to have spent hundreds of hours in a small closet with my dad’s old Durst M600 enlarger to develop my own photos (taken with an old Kodak Retina 1b). Later I also used the stand to take (film) photos of small paintings and drawings. I’m not sure when I got rid of the enlarger. But this inspired me to hunt one down again and use my trusty old Kodak which has been sitting in a dark box at the bottom of a closet for too long to shoot some film and reintroduce myself to the forgotten art of developing film. I did buy a fancy device to scan my negatives, and it does a decent job. Thanks for the burst of nostalgia!
Reading your comment, I can smell the chemicals! I'm starting with my scanning setup but also renovating a space in my basement for creative projects so maybe another little darkroom will happen! Thanks for sharing, Hans.
Yep, I must’ve sold you my Beseler 23c-II back in the ‘90s. Cuz I don’t have it any more.
Beautiful!
Thanks, Henrique!
For the past few months, I've been using my Durst 606's copy stand to attach my digital camera with an antique canon FD macro lens to it, the Durst's negative carrier to hold the film and my dad's iPad as a light source and this video just inspired me to build a proper scanning setup to keep my enlarger in action even when I'm not printing. Thanks !
iPad is a great option! It’s how I did my first scans! You can tell I haven’t printed in a bunch of years so didn’t even think of using the enlarger’s holder. Thanks for sharing!
@@jessesenko reeaaaally impressed by the holders you made tho, a lot less fiddly than using the enlarger's carrier. Darkroom printing is really cool as well, a whole other way of consuming your art. I started with some cheap 5x7 Foma paper and the same chemistry I used for film development, you should definitely start again !
@@EnisMemic on the list! It’s a very long list tho!
50k views? Dang dude. Killing it. Think you hit the vlog jackpot! Seriously though. Great work.
Thanks Man! Thinking of doing a George Costanza and going out on a high! "I'M OUT!"
Well done Jesse. Funny video with nice results.
Gott my mamiya c3 + 105mm lens last week. fomapan film arrives tomorrow. picked up an minty (35mm) enlarger + bottles, masking frame, red light etc. for.... £20 - vertical clamp grip for attaching my D5200 arrives tomorrow (£5.60) - all i need is the LED white light bits and some rodinal/fixer.
Oh amazing, very fun. Bon voyage!
You could also have used the enlarger head as a light source and the film carrier by turning it upside down and using it as your objective on the base under your camera rig. In fact the earlier dursts had a reversable condenser set that you could copy with but using the lamphousing and the condensers will give you an evenly distributed light source which if you like you could add further diffusion to if you like. I have an opemus enlarger which I am desperately waiting to be shipped from my previous address to create a similar scan system to yours and it has two foam boxes that can provide illumination for both 35 and 120 and relative film carriers. It was originally for colour. Great video, thank you.
Thanks Leslie! I've heard other comments about this method. I got into photography right at the tail end of the film era, so didn't learn the ins-and-outs of these machines, so really great to learn. I wonder if the head would overheat the film with the light at the bottom, or was it designed this way?
@@jessesenko Good point Jesse, it would only be workable with reflex enlargers like the one you took the mounting stand from or similar heads that lamp is at the back of. Older enlargers had the bulb above the film and would be too cumbersome to turn upside down and may as you say create a heat problem. Putting a space between the upside down head and the worktop would provide room for the bulb to vent.
As an afterthought you would have to also have to remove the lens holder and bellows to enable access to your scan area.
Or just use the enlargers film carriers over your own lightsource if you want to stay more compact.
I use an enlarger like you do but for the light source I use a box with a speedlight and some difusion, the advantage is that by using your flash on TTL you get auto exposure, which is good when you have frames with variying density. The right exposure is hard to judge on a negative... Other advantage is that it removes any risk of bluriness from vibrations or small movemnts in the system.
Oh cool! this is a great option. I imagine it could be set up as a book light to get reflected light through the diffusion so it's perfectly soft. For exposure, I end up just using the histogram, but i've only really scanned a couple rolls this year. I use the 2 sec timer to help with the shake so i can get the exposure. This video is doing better than usual, so really amazing to see all the ideas and processes people are sharing.
It's easy to get a good histogram with a constant light.
exactly what I do @@jessesenko . the lightbox is something like a shoebox with the speedlight entering on one side and hitting a 45 degree white carboard at the other end. light get reflected up through some difusion and a glass plate.
I made a film holder from bits of 2mm black plastic card which works OK. Getting hold of a trashed enlarger would be brilliant.
There must be a reason my library card reappears and this video was in my feed just days apart. It must be because the love of art is contagious.
100%!
I stopped using film as frankly I just can't afford it. But I still hold it dear to my heart. Your video and ingenuity is fantastic, plus you have my kind of humour. So....that's me subscribing to your channel Jesse. Now to check your older videos. :)
OK... I need to know what clear finish you used on the wood. I love that it didn't change the natural color of the wood at all. I see that it is Behr brand. But which of their many finishes is it?
Thanks.
Hey Grant! I used regular water-based urethane. Doesn’t darken the wood. Probably satin finish. I’ve got a can of Behr these days but prob just because it was the cheapest!
“Sell my body” sent coffee out my nose
Great idea- but I will just use the negative carrier from the enlarger to hold the neg flat over a small light box
Thanks. Yes good idea. You can tell I haven’t printed in a while!
I had absolutely had no interest in this topic when my feed landed on this video. By the end of it I was racking my brain trying to remember where I might have some negatives I could use and how to build your gizmo. Well done!
I love your humour
I have had good luck using the negative carriers from my enlarger to hold the film on the light table.
One of the silly things I didn’t even think about! You can tell I haven’t done any prints in a while!
I shoot MF and LF and have hired a Flextight X5 in the past. For $60/hr I could scan something like 12 LF at 4000 lpi and end up with enormous files which were satisfyingly large, but of limited practical value beyond meeting my purist orientations. I have an old V700 but will start experimenting with shooting my negs directly. Maybe they'll be good enough for my purposes, if not falling a little short of my (silly) desires to go max res! Cheers and thanks from Sydney - Dave
I used to do scans on the same thing in Toronto around 15 years ago. Rented an imacon workstation at Toronto Image Works. I have to do some more testing, but this setup (mainly due to the lens’s sharpness) is the closest to those imacon scans at home. And I’d love to learn how to operate a large format cam!
It seems you arrived at the same solution that I did. I had a Durst M605 enlarger back in the 70s before I upgraded to an Omega 4x5 enlarger, and remembered using it as a copy stand. I found a little 35 mm version on eBay for less than $50, bought an Essential film holder system and made a little box out of 1/2 Gator foam to hold my video light and holder. (Sure beat using my old color head upside down and Omega D series neg carriers) I tether my Nikon D5500 APS-C camera with a 30mm macro to Lightroom on my iMac now and couldn’t be more pleased. I have been using this for a few years now to digitize my 40+ plus year library as well as my father’s and grandfather’s film. I need to sell my film scanners because I don’t think I will ever use them again. Except maybe for 4x5, but I recently tried shooting sections of a transparency and stitching them together and had pretty good luck.
Thanks for sharing, Curtis. So were you using the head upside-down and shooting into it to scan? Just checked out the essential film holder and it looks like a really great and affordable option. Also stitching your 4x5 seems like a good option and gives you a ton of detail, which is the whole spirit of 4x5. That’s a project I want to do down the road… build my own. Biggest format I’ve shot is just a borrowed 6x7 medium format. Do you find you get “lensing” with your 30mm or do you just flatten it in Lightroom? This 100mm is probably going to be my next lens purchase.
It's mine...
Thanks for the video
Been thinking of getting into film (who isn’t nowadays 😂) and this was a super inspiring video! Cheers
Thanks Matt! It’s a lot of fun and a different process than digital, so I get to think about my frames in a more considered way.
For DIY you need the materials, tools and wherewithal, none of which I posess. I used an Epson 4990 flatbed with film holders to scan 35mm and 6x6 cm negatives. I also scznned old family photos with it. Your method looks like more fun.
Yep totally, i love the DIY part of it, but know it's not for everyone. Scanners still do a great job! They probably do a better job than the extension tube route i took on my first attempt. Thanks for watching!
I was using an Epson 2450 and with medium format ok and with 4x5 good enough but when I switched to using my Canon R8 with EF50 macro lens the sharpness increased substantially and it was so much faster and no more lines in scans. I use the Epson scanner film holders on a Kodak lightbox (at first was using the scanner lid lightbox which worked ok).
My personal tip, having made my own 120 film "scanner": use a real macro lens. I used to use a Canon 50mm f/1.8 lens with extension tubes. Then, I got a Tamron 90mm macro lens. The sharpness difference was staggering! I thought the 50 with extension tubes was fine, but it was not even close to the results I get from the Tamron. Also, that light you used is the one I got for my medium format scanner - the light isn't even enough across the entire panel. Even with multiple layers of diffusion, it's just not up to the task.
Yes. Agree on all points. The 100 mm canon macro was such a vast improvement over anything with tubes, and yes I don’t love that led’s diffusion as is. Last time I scanned 120 I had to use a full size panel led to get an even spread (my jenga setup in the vid). I’ll keep exploring!
I tried the EF50 1.8 at first too and with extension tubes. Was very sharp in center but corners were soft with medium format. Got the EF50 F2.5 macro and it's sharp across corners. Only use extension tube when doing 35mm. For medium format no extension tubes.
Man I wondered where my enlarger went! Love the video.
Lol. Thanks for watching.
Love it. Strong Dadvibes. Thank you!
lol. I'll take that as a compliment. Maybe working from home for 10 years is starting to show!
Thank you for showing that you DO NOT NEED $900 to scan film with a digital camera. Even everything considered - R&D, manufacturing, administration and distribution, material cost, etc. - I personally still think that those heavily advertised scanning stands by certain brands are _grossly_ overpriced.
thoughts on the actual rig linked with the film holder? also did you iron your film holder and sand it or using it as is?
I didn’t iron or sand my film holder 3D print. You’re implying to avoid scratches, right? Sanding would probably be a good idea!
OMG…I had that Durst! Warmed my heart to see it again. Weird to hear you describe the pos/neg process. I’m like who doesn’t know all this? Then I realize how old I am. :(
lol. Yes. A good chance anyone under 35 never touched film!
The best illuminator and holder for 35mm film is this... Photo magnifier! You just had to turn it upside down with the lens and unscrew this lens!
Came for the project overview, subscribed for the color commentary.
Thanks a lot!
Where can I find the clamp shown in your cabin attached to the mic stand? Does it have the 3/8 threads for the tripod head? Thanks!
The clamp is called a Mafer or a Super clamp. They sometimes come with a baby stud or spigot that sticks in the bottom. I have a double ended spigot with 3/8” threads on one end that just screws into the ball head. Just pay attention to the threading on the spigot if the clamp comes with one when you’re shopping.
@@jessesenko Thanks for the info! I bought the Valoi stand a few months ago and the "clamp" that the camera is mounted to is almost not worth using. It is very plastic and sags and requires compensation of the neg carrier tilt. Buying a real metal clamp is cheaper than shipping it back to Finland. I am glad I found your channel!
That’s what I saw, I think on Kyle McDougall’s channel. They sell things called “macro focussing rails” which I’ve never used but could fine tune your frame size as well.
i have a plustek opticfilm 7200 and is quite capable and cost like 300 bucks, maybe a better one like de 7400 with iSRD but for the price
I have just started scanning old negatives from my family history of running a photography studio all the way back when photography first started. I have glass negatives all the way up to 35mm negatives.
I have been told I should use a mirror less camera like my Nikon J1 that does 10mp. I do have a Nikon d3400 that has a flip mirror that can be set to be flipped up so it doesn’t make sound and seems to be like a mirror less camera at 24mp.
Is any of this true.
My mount is a big table clamp from Amazon and a sturdy arm that bolts into it with a pivot with the camera mount with an 360 adjustable ball joint with a thread screw on it. I use a small 4 way bubble level to level things out.
Also do I need a macro lens? I have a cheap one that is just 1 lens glass and screws in to the end like a filter. I have yet to get a Kodak light box
Hey Guy, this sounds like a really cool project. I'm a big proponent of using the gear you already have first, and then upgrading (or renting!) what you personally think is the weakest link.
I imagine your d3400 is more than good enough. And the mirror flip up is probably to reduce shake and/or wear and tear.
I feel like you might need a lens upgrade. There are probably a lot of older nikon macro lenses available. But a rental is another option. Just make a weekend out of the scanning and return the lens. I wouldn't buy for a single purpose.
Instead of a bubble level, use a mirror on surface to get your sensor and film parallel. I got this tip from commenters here and made my newest video about it.
Kyle McDougall has a good video about a budget scanning setup and I think the biggest takaweay is that you can get some pretty fantastic results with a cheap setup... it's the lens that really helps.
@@jessesenko I think the weaker link might be the lens that it’s used. It’s like coating a budget lens next to a prime lens. I’ll watch the video on the mirror level trick. I already had the bubble level which is small enough to lay in the back screen of the camera, and it is not permanently attached. Although the weakest link could be the light source as well. I tried using a computer monitor but it ironically shown pixels in the old photos.
@@guytisdale yes. You can use an iPad or even old phone screen. Just make sure that your negs aren’t right against it. If there is some distance, the depth of field will take care of seeing pixels
@@guytisdale check out the other comments on this vid. Lots of ideas that might help you
Great video! How do you convert your negatives to positives? Do you use Capture One?
Yes, i love Capture One, but you can do it in any image software. I do it in an older video in my film playlist, but essentially you look at your curves and grab the black point at the bottom left and drag it to the top (what's black becomes white) and then grab your white point at the top right and drag it down (what's white becomes black). You can even do this with the curves right in Photos on mac if you use one... pretty simple.
well that's where my enlarger went to you're totally off the hook of being a hoarder :P loved the humor and the scans looked great.
Phew! Thanks Joseph!
Nice job.... I have an old enlarger in my loft.... so you dont have my enlarger. I use an iPhone as backing light.... here it is important to have some distance to the negative from the iPhone, or you will pick up the pixels in the display. Cheers.
Thanks! Yes! I started out using an iPad before the light table and now LED panel. The Apple stuff is a nice clean backlight if it’s what you’ve got!
I used the same Durst enlarger column I bought for $ 7. Hard mounted a five level 96 %CR LED lamp under a boxed in film holder that I can change. I set focus magnified i in live view, the do a whole roll.
Sometimes when the room light is bright, I put a tube over the lens hood down to the holder; I get a bit better histogram, It's great.
This is great. And RUclips is great. I don’t know anyone in real life outside of one friend from design school who has ever touched an enlarger, so I make this stuff in a vacuum and I didn’t even think about using the enlarger’s film holder. 🤦♂️. Your process sounds really great and I’ll remember to turn the lights off when I scan. This is all so fun.
@@jessesenko I didn't use the enlarger"s 35mm holder, I pieced it together from aftermarket parts, including a 35mm strip negative holder. :-) Ashuuter remote is a great ide if you already have one.
@@MrFreakwent ok cool. Remotes are great, but I'm just using my cam's 2 sec timer to get rid of the shake if that's what you mean.
Believe it or NOT, I have already bought 8 different types of old enlargers (35mm and 120) from Marketplace. But I've been moving for the past 5 years, therefore I haven't had the time , yet, to check which Enlarger structure is best for this "scanning table". Now, I moved to a new house, and soon I'll be doing my scanning stand, and I'll keep you posted.
Thanks for this lovely video
Making me feel better about having two! :) good luck with the conversion!
Have you tried just an old slides duplicator lens?
something like Ohnar zoom slide duplicator
I haven't! Hadn't heard of it either. I just built this setup with stuff I had around, but I'll look into this one.
LMAO! Dude, this is an awesome video. Im so glad I found yore channel. I commented at the start of this video, but after watching the entire video, I must say, Perforated feces dude!
You are brilliant brother. Of course I subscribed and ring your little bell thingy. I cant wait to check out your other videos. You do have other videos, right? I'm gonna find my liberry card and get that frame holder printed. I would like to find a 120 film holder as well, but hey, one thing at a time. Thanks again Jessie, this has been such a great find for me! I know it's library, I was attempting humor. I'll see you in the next one!
Thank you sir! and i hope the 'perforated feces' is a figure of speech and not something you should see a doctor about!
Was there, done that, .. I love the irony though. Nice music also ...
If only your daughter in the photo were taking a photo of a print. With a photo of your daughter on that print.
*insert tim and eric mind blown gif*
Sadly I have soviet enlarger which has bulky odd construction and basically I need to tear the enlarger head itself to make something like that. I thought about it for quite some time, but alas, still can't find proper solution for film holder and proper light plate. Certain specific things are hard to find in Russia for some reason ;c (that was the case all the time, not only after February of 2022)
Makes sense. Another commenter suggested putting the film up where it's supposed to go in the enlarger as if you were making prints and shoot up into it. You might be able to remove the lens and just use the enlarger itself as a light box. Good luck and thanks for watching!
OK, now I have watched it and have gotten a lot of 💡. It is great you don’t present a “complete solution” like using these items ($$$$$$) to get the best result, but showing how to do it the DIY-style.
The recipe is KISS - Keep It Simple Smart***. (Or … why making something simple, cheep and good when you can actually make it complicated, expensive and bad? 😏).
Thanks !!!!!
Was that the abandoned velodrome in Detroit? I have photos I took of a race at that one maybe a decade ago.
Oh cool! Just looking it up now. No, I’m in Canada. So mine’s about a 3hr drive east of yours.
Is anyone gonna talk about the fact that he has a riding crop? No. Okay. I guess it's just me.
My boyfriend made something VERY similar but to capture slides. Made his own 3D parts to hold the slides in place, and to photograph both the slide frames (where people write shit on it--the date/year, the location, the name of the person), then only capture the actual image.
Word is, he likes to keep people awkwardly guessing!
I love the idea of capturing the whole slide. Requires two lights I guess. Second one to light the slide mount. A friend is working on a doc and asked to borrow this for slides. So will 3D print a holder for that soon!
@@jessesenko Cool! Would love to see it when you're done. And yes, my b/f has two lights, uses his Canon, and has a fast-loading sliide carousel. I showed him your video and he's like "See! I'm not the only geek with classic film enlargers laying around!"
Good times. I have a device that turns my Dremel into a drill press that could probably help me make the same type of scanner. I might have to do something like this some time. I have it in my head to one day make a 35mm stop motion short with a film camera.
Do it! The 100mm macro lens is pretty key. Been borrowing a friends and going to grab it now
The crop made me snork out loud!
I love taking a joke one extra step too far!