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  Photography Forum: Panoramic Photography Forum: 
  Q. Long Film Scanner?
           Asked by Phillip Cohen   Donor  (K=9520) on 3/19/2006
Is there a scanner made that can scan in a long negative and output a file for roundshot and circuit negatives? Not talking flatbed, talking about someting where the film is moved past the scanning element via rollers and the data is continuously output while it is scanning so there is no limit to the length of the film, only a width limitation.

Phil


    


Roger Williams  Donor  (K=82213) - Comment Date 3/19/2006
I'm not aware of anything available like that, Phil, but the Epson 3200F can scan film (35mm or 120/220) in uninterrupted lengths up to 19cm, the length of the moving film-carrier frame. I use this for my rotaryr camera negs which are 6 x 18cm long, and for my unusual panorama format 35mm negs, which are 23 x 63 or 67mm long.

I do know that the professional scanners used by Fuji Film in the DPE chain stores in Japan can scan an uncut 36-exp. roll of 35mm film, although how the images are stored I'm afraid I don't know. I could ask, though, as I have a very good contact on the inside. My guess is that there would be memory limitations on the scanner output side that would limit the effective length that could be handled.




Phillip Cohen  Donor  (K=9520) - Comment Date 3/19/2006
Roger, I am sure that the Fuji scanner is just like my old Nikon LS2000 with the roll film feeder. It probably reads a frame at a time, saves it, then advances the film. Doubt it would do a continuous scan. Oh well sure would be neat to feed in a long neg and have a big digital file to output to a 9800 printer.

I have a home made 120 size rotating camera that produces a pretty long negative, it may fit in an 8x10 enlarger but I think it might be a bit longer. Will have to measure it. If it fits I will build a special negative carrier and head for my old Zone VI enlarger.

Phil




Roger Williams  Donor  (K=82213) - Comment Date 3/19/2006
I have a home-made 120 size rotary camera--except that it wasn't made at MY home. Made by a French panorama photographer... 10" is 25cm, and that's very long for a 120 negatve. An 8 x10" enlarger might work... It is SO much trouble stitching that a rotary camera is a very attractive solution. But, of course, it has its own problems. [sigh] Scanning and printing being just two of them.




Phillip Cohen  Donor  (K=9520) - Comment Date 3/19/2006
The part I like most about rotary cameras is that if you are fast on your feet you can be in the same picture multiple times ;=] One project I always wanted to do was to put the camera in the center of a big ring of kids all holding hands or doing something strange, have not seen that done yet, could be neat if done right.

Phil




Roger Williams  Donor  (K=82213) - Comment Date 3/19/2006
Of if you are too slow on your feet it will capture your back as you scurry around the nearest corner. I am resigned to playing Hitchcock in my rotary shots these days...




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