![]() But, I wouldn't go any lower than 3000 if you really want to archive a high quality film scan.Īnd if even 4000 dpi seems to low for you, and you really want to try going a little higher - if it will make you sleep at night going a bit more - maybe try up to 5000 dpi and see if it introduces much more grain in your images. If you try 4000 dpi and you feel there is too much grain, work your way down to 3000 dpi. If however, you really want to do it the right way - you really want to archive the best quality of the image that you possibly can so you can pass them down to your family someday, then I would recommend going with a dpi between 3000 dpi – 4000 dpi. If you are scanning your negatives to just have some nice pictures, but you don't really care about getting them perfect, or your computer is fairly old and you don't want large file sizes for example, then 2000 dpi is just fine. Those with basic goals, and those with advanced goals. I like to keep it simple and break people down into 2 categories. What's Is the Best DPI to Scan your Film Negatives and Slides? So at the highest, with the Epson V600 don't scan your prints, slides or negatives above 9600 dpi.īut, even that is overkill and you will see not only a massively huge file size, but also too much grain when scanning film. Computers these days are fast enough to handle the file size, but the additional grain isn't so good. So, my suggestion to anyone is never to go beyond the optical resolution of your scanner. The image quality doesn't get better - really only worse. All it's really doing is blowing up the pixels and cropping the image around it. ![]() That's basically what the scanner is doing as well when it's using this digital (Interpolated) resolution. But, many still zoom in even tighter and that's because it's digitally pushing into the pixels to make the image “look” closer. ![]() Once you have zoomed in all the way, the actual glass lens no longer comes out any further. If you've used some of the point and shoot digital cameras that have come out in the last 10 years, you know many of them have an “optical” zoom rating. Epson V600 specifications on the outside of the box.
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