![]() ![]() VIDEO TUTORIAL TRANSCRIPT: Using VueScan Professional and ColorPerfect Switch to the YouTube version of this video. The advantages of YouTube are that we added our transcript as subtitles to the video and that you can share it with your friends. Our video player's color rendition might be better and our chapter navigation isn't available on YouTube. This video is available both from our site and on YouTube. Would you like to read SUBTITLES or share it with your friends on YouTube? The following video tutorial gives a step by step explanation on how to achieve this with VueScan Professional. To harness the full potential of our Photoshop Plug-in it's important to obtain image data that has been subjected to as little processing as possible (RAW data). ColorPerfect processes scans with color integrity and gives unprecedented flexibility in creative image editing. Video tutorial on increasing the quality of your slide and negative scans from VueScan Professional with ColorPerfect! Find out more about how to scan with VueScan. From personal experience.Video tutorial: Using VueScan and ColorPerfect to create perfect photos from your negative scans The only thing I might possibly have added is that a scanner calibrated for Kodachrome with a target slide will give you Kodachrome scans that don’t look like Ektachrome scans, very much at all, provided the Kodachrome you are scanning is in good condition. You probably already know most or all of this. ![]() Having said all that, since the target slides are NLA, this might be a situation where DSLR duplicating might give you a more accurate result since you wouldn’t be scanning with a scanner setup for “normal” transparencies. Having an it8 calibration target slide for Kodachrome eliminates most of that. It’s certainly possible to end up with a final file that looks like Kodachrome if you have the slide to be duped in front of you, but it takes work adjusting colors both while scanning and during post processing. Much you will find on the web is like this thread Where, none or almost none, of the respondents have any experience with a calibrated scanner, but don’t hesitate to offer advice on scanning Kodachrome, regardless. ![]() (Most of the Kodachrome pix I see posted on the internet don’t look like Kodachrome for, I’m guessing, the fact they were scanned on scanners not calibrated for Kodachrome.) The only thing I can offer is my opinion, from experience, that once the scanner is calibrated with the Kodachrome it8 target, Kodachrome scans won’t look like Ektachrome scans, they’ll look like Kodachrome. So, I won’t go too deeply into the need, as you already are aware. Upon researching links I could post here which might explain that, I found one which indicated that you might already be aware of those targets. Made a world of difference once I calibrated my scanner with one. When originally available they were $50, now the existing ones can be very expensive, if you can even find one. Otherwise, as you have seen, it won’t look that different from Ektachrome.Įven more unfortunately, those it8 calibration slides are no longer available from anyone because they can’t be made without the K14process. There is a “Kodachrome” setting in the drop down menu, but, unfortunately, the only way to scan Kodachrome to get it to look like Kodachrome is to calibrate your scanner with a Kodachrome calibration slide. For what it’s worth, I had a similar experience with a Nikon 9000 ED and, earlier, a Dimage 5400, Vuescan and Silverfast. ![]()
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