Archive for November, 2008

Where We’re Coming From…

Monday, November 24th, 2008

I found my old 35mm camera again this morning. I haven’t used it since college—but it’s been lovingly packed up and carried with my wherever I move, even if it’s to just sit on a shelf or in the back of my closet.

I have two digital cameras which see far more use, but nothing will ever make me give up that old camera.

Two reasons: it was my first real, grown-up, utterly manual camera—everything this camera did was my choice, good or bad—and my grandfather gave me this camera as a gift before I left for college. It was a requirement that all incoming photo students own a 35mm camera with an internal light meter. The camera was given to him several years before, but he had another which he preferred.

The camera itself is a Rolleiflex and is a workhorse of German engineering that will quite likely outlive the 35mm film format. I keep it in a mismatched leather case that doesn’t quite close because the front of the original fell off during a trip to the zoo and dropped into the wolf enclosure. I remember there being a moment where I was watching the case fall and thought, “I could still grab it…but then I might drop the camera…” The wolves could have the case. I spent a majority of my time in college with this camera to my eye—even without it I saw the world through a frame: how would I photograph this? What aperture? What speed? Each and every moment could be a perfect image just waiting to be caught.

Time seems different when you can press it into film. There is something frozen about a photograph, something still and quiet. You have to slow down if you want to look at old albums or slides—you have to specifically seek them out. It’s the same to taking pictures on film—you have to move deliberately to some extent. If there’s anything to call our lives in 2008, slow is far from it, and stopping everything to try a find your family’s old pictures isn’t as appealing. Especially not when digital cameras enable us to have years of images and memories just a few mouse clicks away.

Does that mean that we have any desire to get rid of these old photographs, negatives, or slides? Not at all, just like I would never even dream of getting rid of my grandfather’s camera. These are history—more than that, these are our histories. One of a kind and utterly priceless.

When was the last time you looked through your stacks of old photographs? Many of us even have inherited drawers or boxes filled from our parents, and their parents as well. All filled with small windows into the past that we might not have ever seen. Wouldn’t you like to?

This is where ScanDigital is ready to help you.

Pixel Puzzle

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

So you’re ready to get your  prints, slides, or negatives scanned and bring them back to life in this new digital age? Wonderful! The next thing that you need to consider is what resolution you would like the images scanned at, and this can be a confusing question–I know because it’s one of the questions I answer most here, and hopefully this handy guide make it all a little bit more clear.

The most common question about resolution is “Which is better?” or the closely related “Higher resolution is better, right?” And the truth is that one resolution is not better than the other–they are simply different sizes. The resolutions on our pricing page (http://www.scandigital.com/price.php) describe the number of DPI (Dots Per Inch–also sometimes called PPI: pixels per inch). That actually gives a lot of information once you understand that it’s purely a measurement–to illustrate, I’ll describe this out with a standard 4 inch by 6 inch photograph:

Let’s start with our standard resolution 300dpi–once we’re done there will be 300 pixels per inch of photograph, so if we scanned a 1 inch by 1 inch section it would hold 900 pixels total (because Length x Width = the Area of a shape–and you thought you’d never use that again after school). So the total pixel dimension of the .jpeg image that we scan from the photo will be 1200 x 1800 pixels (which believe it or not is close the size of many monitors’ desktops–it’s a pretty big digital image)

So what does this scan allow us to do? Well for one, it will give you an exact 4×6 print of the image making it an exact 1:1 copy of the original photograph, which is awesome! Unless you would like a bigger photograph, then it is slightly less awesome (but not by much).

This is where the higher resolution choice comes in to save the day. An example of a 4inch x 6inch photo scanned at 600dpi is exactly the same as the previous example–except doubled. Each inch of the photograph is scanned to hold 600 pixels so the final dimensions of the digital image will be 2400 pixels x 3600 pixels– a staggering total of 8640000 pixels in the entire .JPEG! With that many pixels you would be able to print out an 8 x 10 inch print of that image–quite a bit bigger than the original 4 x 6.

All of these same principles apply negatives as well since there is quite a bit of enlarging with any negative for any print or scan and the math isn‘t quite so cookie-cutter clean.

A 35mm negative (which is what most people are familiar with and think of when people say  “negatives”) measures  24 x 36mm, or 0.94 inches x 1.41 inches, which means that the scanned image will be close to 2000 x 3000 pixels. With a .jpeg this size, you have a few print options–this size could easily be printed as a 4×6 inch print and up to an 8 x 10 inch print.  And just like in the previous example, a 4000dpi scan would double the size that you can  print the .jpeg at.

Now that you know a little bit more about what the resolutions mean–how do you know which you want to select for your order? Well it all boils down to a simple question: What would you like to do with your digital images once you have them? If you would like to email pictures to your friends and family, or create a slide show on your computer, or even play the images through your DVD player if it allows it–then our standard resolution is perfect for you! However if you would like all of those options and the ability take these scans and create the largest print possible, then you would like to consider our highest resolution options.

I hope this has cleared a few things up, and as always, we’re happy to answer any other questions through email, live chat, or over the phone.