In today's digital age, 35mm film slides and the bulky projectors formerly used to view them are a thing of the past. Instead of boxing up your old slides and stuffing them in an attic to be forgotten ...
Q. I am a regular reader of your column and have found it enlightening. However, I believe you may have misread the recent question you answered for reader Bill Reetz regarding burning 35 mm color ...
Q: I have about 800 slides I took during a post-college, pre-grad-school road trip to Alaska in 1979. I would like to put it all on DVD(s) with music from the ’70s. I have both a Dell and a Mac. What ...
Which film and slide scanner is best? Everyone enjoys having old photos of precious memories to look at, but over time, those prints can fade or get lost or damaged. To properly preserve them for ...
I really don't want to shell out for a scanner then just have it laying around after I'm done scanning my old photographs. Also for the purest I would really need a good flatbed ($200 or so?) and a ...
I have been looking online at the Epson V600 and the Canon 9000F. Based on their features (automatic image correction/enhancement and film and 35mm mount holders) and price I think that is what I am ...
The Pandigital Personal Photo & Negative Scanner/Converter PanScn05 ($99.99 direct) is one of those rare products that does more than you might expect. Not only does it scan both photographic prints ...
Old film and slides can hold decades of family history, but they’re fragile and prone to fading over time. If you want to preserve those memories in a more durable format, the Kodak Slide N Scan Film ...
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