![]() You first make a preview (it only takes a few seconds) and only then you decide which slides you really want to scan. Even the automatic mode delivers very good scans, but with the ScanGear you can adjust every aspect of your scan yourself: input and output modalities, resolution (tss 3 dpi) color mode, image adjustments and corrections and much more. I am particularly happy with the included software, the Canon IJ Scan Utility. In addition, it is also a full-fledged flatbed scanner for documents, photos, drawings. Larger film formats are also possible, although I don't need them myself, so I haven't tried them yet. The machine runs full time and processes framed slides (4 at a time), strips of up to 6 slides (2 strips at a time), loose, unframed slides (up to 12 at a time, although insertion requires a little more care) and also all my black-and-white white negatives with incredible quality. This Canon Canoscan 9000F has been making me rediscover old slides every day for a few weeks now. Especially the maximum resolution was much too low. I used to have a so-called slide scanner, but I was absolutely not satisfied with the result. ![]() I haven't seen them since my Kodak Carroussel broke down ten years ago. Ten thousand (or more) slides have been gathering dust in cupboards and boxes for fifty years.
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