I’m never bored. Scanning film takes up most of my time
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:10:50 JST Adrianna Tan
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:16:16 JST Adrianna Tan
Nikon CoolScan gang
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:21:38 JST Adrianna Tan
@rye 35mm film and medium format. Slide film. The whole works
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Rye (rye@ioc.exchange)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:21:39 JST Rye
@skinnylatte oh wow this is amazing, what can it scan?
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:24:14 JST Adrianna Tan
@dev tons! The Harvey milk photo center is a city run darkroom and digital photo lab. They have a large format printer and various scanners. I got started there but then developed a preference for the type of scanner I like.
There’s also photolaundry which lets you rent Fuji frontiers and noritsus and imacons. After one training you can use it yourself. Cheaper than a lab. The Fuji is the fastest. 8 rolls in an hour
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Dev (dev@discuss.systems)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 06:24:15 JST Dev
@skinnylatte nice! Are there any local scanning resources or coops? Scanning seems to be the most expensive part of film development. I think SFPL has a lab, but with limited hours that are inconvenient
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Dec-2024 07:20:56 JST Adrianna Tan
I know DSLR scanning exists. But I shoot film so I don’t have to touch a DSLR unless I have to (bird, whale photos)
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