11/28/2023 0 Comments Canon 9000f mark ii or v600 vuescan![]() I also tried the higher setting of 9600 dpi, but this just increased the file size. That’s almost ten times the resolution of the dedicated film scanners I saw, many of which are a similar price to the CanoScan that I decided on. ![]() This gives me scanned images that are slightly over 10,000 pixels square, which means the images are 100 megapixels. Firstly, I found that I was still seeing a usable quality increase in my scans when using 4800 dpi. I also mentioned that this was possibly overkill, but I did some more experimentation with my new scanner and found out a few other interesting points that I also want to relay. In my earlier tutorial on this, I mentioned that I was scanning at 4200 dpi (dots per inch). The only other options are PDF and PNG, neither of which are suitable formats for photographs. JPEG is compressed generally, and will gradually degrade as you resave your images, so in my opinion, JPEG should really only be used as an output format. You can also turn on Enable Large Image Scans by clicking the Settings button on the Scanner Utility and it’s a good idea to select TIFF for the Data Format under ScanGear, as you ideally want to be saving your images in a lossless format. Without these options, the scanner will only provide relatively low-resolution scans of medium format film. Under the Scan menu Advanced Mode Settings section, enable both the Enable Large Image Scans checkbox and the Enable 48/16 bit Output checkboxes. To enable higher resolution scans, when you first start the scanner software by opening the Canon IJ Scan Utility application and then clicking the ScanGear icon, switch to the Advanced Mode, then open the Preferences panel. There are other dedicated scanning applications available, but at this point, I have not tried any, so we’ll stick with the method I’m currently using. Note too that I have not been able to access these settings via the TWAIN scanner drivers that are installed, so I am not able to get higher resolution scans from within Affinity Photo or Photoshop, I have to use the Canon IJ Scanner Utility. When I first installed the software that comes with my new Canon scanner, there were a number of limitations forced on me by the software, which would have resulted in lower quality scans, so we’ll cover this first, in case you have bought the same or a similar scanner. Of course, if you never want to make any large prints, and your final use is the computer screen, then that resolution would be fine. We’re talking about creating images that are around 10 to 15 megapixels, even when scanning medium format film, and that is just too low to be of any use in my opinion. Also, not that all of the dedicated film scanners that I could find online were relatively low resolution. Regular flat-bed scanners designed just for documents shine light onto the document while scanning, but to be able to scan slides or negatives, the scanner has to have a light built into the lid to shine through the film, so this is something to be careful of when buying a scanner for this purpose. This is a sure sign that Canon is probably preparing to release something new, which I would like to have waited for, but I didn’t have that luxury with my old scanner having broken. Note though that B&H Photo and don’t seem to stock this scanner anymore, and Canon’s website here in Japan also marks it as running low on stock. This scanner is also a few years old in design, but it’s the latest model that I could find that offers high-resolution scanning and the film guide for 120 film. When I came to scan the film that I had processed recently, I found that my scanner had broken, so I replaced it with a Canon CanoScan 9000F Mark II. Four years ago I walked you through scanning 120 format film on my Epson Scanner, which was around six years or so old at the time, making ten now.
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