I've long been wanting to get some of my negatives scanned on a drum scanner as I plan to print some of my images in A1 format for my studio. I also thought I would test to see if a drum scanner can get anymore detail from an under exposed negative compared to a normal lab scan.
I really liked this shot that I took in Bangkok but it was too underexposed to be considered print worthy. Let's see if the drum scanner was able to save the image.
Drum scan was done on a Heidelberg Tango
Lab scan was done on a Noritsu hs-1800
Thanks to Tim and Charlotte over at [ Ссылка ] for working on these images. Highly recommended and very affordable service (not sponsored).
---------
GEAR USED:
BEST CAMERA UNDER $1K (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
FAV LOW LIGHT LENS: (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
FAV MACRO LENS: (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
GOOD VLOG MIC: (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
AMAZING LOW COST LIGHT: (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
120CM QUICK SETUP SOFTBOX: (US) [ Ссылка ] | (UK) [ Ссылка ]
Drum Scan vs Lab Scan - Will it save underexposed film?
Теги
drum scanningheidelberg tangolarge formatdrum scan qualityunderexposed filmektar 100mamiya rz67underexposed negativelab scanningnoritsu hs-1800noritsu scannpakon scannernegative lab profilm scanningmedium formatscanning film120 filmfilm scannerscanning color filmdrum scanning filmdrum scanning servicedrum scanning negativesektar 100 120bangkok nightlifebangkok cityunderexposed film photographyunderexposed film scans