6661 negatives were scanned with this baby! Pooh! It gets boring and tiring, but after the first 100 or so you're already in a routine and understand what image adjustments you can make (basically just turn the exposure value up or down by 0.5 or 1.0 stops, maybe a or twice for the color adjustment, and never the sharpen function because it's too sharp) and go. The biggest problem you will run into is dealing with the different styles or methods of the past where the negatives were either individually (110 and 135mm which I did), best glued to the paper on one side, what a royal pain is. remove clean or store in separate plastic sleeves that are nice and clean, It just takes longer to get on and off. The machine is the basic electronics. A created digital image cannot be date/time stamped. There is no clock on the board to enable such a feature via the menu system. In addition, dust gets into the lamp projector. So use the very good cleaning brush that came with the machine if you start to see lint/specks in the last few scanned images. Simply pull out the negative film adapter and run a microfiber or static brush across the surface of the lamp. I think it's a 6500K color temperature LED so the device doesn't get hot. Be sure to comply with the specifications of the SD card. Our seller provided a "free" Upgrade to 64GB available in the form of a high speed (SCXC) micro card with adapter. All three are not recommended in the Wolverine manual (i.e. >32GB, high speed (stick to SD or SDHC), and micro usage). Luckily I had a 16GB SDHC card from my camera which worked great. Don't risk ruining this device as it's getting harder and harder to find SD or SDHC cards under 32GB. There are plenty of these, borrow one from a mate if you need to, but 16GB holds over 2500 images at once. Everything will be fine and I've been working with my 16GB card, copying and deleting between batches (see below). Keep an eye on your images. by date with a counter that does not reset. It starts at 0000 and runs sequentially up to 9999, before it starts again (I think I remember I ended with 6661). The adapters work perfectly, although you will have trouble curling your negatives or randomly folded negatives in the envelope. .Finally, getting your old film negatives as digital 4-6MB positives (i.e. 20MP camera) is the reward. Today's modern photo editing software can take care of dust/fibers, color correction, a bit of sharpening, etc. if, like me, you value it beyond digital archiving. I'll probably refine a few 100 "guardians" but they're all digital now, double backed up and ready to be forgotten on disk (except for a few 100's which I'll take the time to put in a digital scrapbook). ). I used the SD card all the time, rather than a very small internal storage. I formatted it with Wolverine's Delete All command on first boot. I turned the power off via the USB port on my MacBook Pro, scanned 250-500+/- images per year, wrote down the serial numbers of the images by month/year on a sticker, then powered off the power, removed the SD memory card, inserted it into the reader slot of my MacBook Pro (with macOS High Sierra, the card read very well. many times) and copied the image series groups to the YYMM folders on my hard drive. I then copied this structure to an external and another 128GB flash drive to satisfy my paranoia of wasting hours and hours of boring work! the desired metadata such as date/time, GPS, copyright information, etc. before archiving your new digital positives in the Photos app on your computer. This way the Photos app understands the timeline and aspects of the collection based on your metadata. I'm using macOS so I think it's best to use MetaImage in the macOS Store. Tried Photo EXIF Editor but too many problems. (Ignore the ratings and calculations.) I then copied this structure to an external and another 128GB flash drive to satisfy my paranoia of wasting hours and hours of boring work! desired metadata such as real date/time, GPS, copyright information, etc. before archiving your new digital positives in a photo app on your computer. In this way, The Photos app understands the timeline and aspects of the collection based on your metadata. I'm using macOS so I think it's best to use MetaImage in the macOS Store. Tried Photo EXIF Editor but too many problems. (Ignore the ratings and calculations.) I then copied this structure to an external and another 128GB flash drive to satisfy my paranoia of wasting hours and hours of boring work! desired metadata such as real date/time, GPS, copyright information, etc. before archiving your new digital positives in a photo app on your computer. This way the Photos app understands the timeline and aspects of the collection based on your metadata. I use macOS, so I'm thinking What's the best way to use MetaImage in the macOS Store? Tried Photo EXIF Editor but too many problems. (Ignore ratings and estimates.) Information before archiving new digital positives in the photo application on your computer. This way the Photos app understands the timeline and aspects of the collection based on your metadata. I'm using macOS so I think it's best to use MetaImage in the macOS Store. Tried Photo EXIF Editor but too many problems. (Ignore ratings and estimates.) Information before archiving new digital positives in the photo application on your computer. This way the Photos app understands the timeline and aspects of the collection based on your metadata. I use macOS, so I'm thinking What's the best way to use MetaImage in the macOS Store? Tried Photo EXIF Editor but too many problems. (Ignore ratings and calculations.)
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