lherrou:
Thanks, the site looks interesting, I may send them a batch of 1000 to see how it works out.
I'm still interested in a hardware solution as well if anyone had recommendations.
Nathan
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Browse All TopicsI have a lifetime of photos that I want to scan. I've seen a Fuji scanner that will batch scan a stack of photos and name each JPG individually. The reviews I've read suggested that it's a good scanner, but maybe not the best resolution for photography.
I'm curious if there are other options out there.
I'm also interested in opinions about scanning negatives as opposed to the photographs themselves.
Thanks,
Nathan
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The HP Scanjet 5500C was a great scanner, I don't know if it or something similar is still available from HP, but you can always check eBay. See http://www.pcmag.com/artic
I haven't yet tried the service. Partly because I haven't had time to organize it yet, partly because i'm slightly nervous about sending my photos from Massachusetts to California for processing, and partly because I don't think they do any type of organizing/tagging for individual rolls of pictures.
I'd love to find the same service locally, but so far i haven't been able to.
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by: lherrouPosted on 2007-09-28 at 06:43:59ID: 19978569
NEMC,
m - they will send you a pre-paid box, you fill it with all the photos you can stuff in, and for $99, you get them all scanned and shipped back to you, usually the same day.
Scanning photos with consumer-level scanners is a long and tedious process. I'd take a serious look at some of the services using Kodak's Batch Photo scanners for the commercial market. I've seen the scanners in action, and they are impressive. One of the services I've seen is http://www.scanmyphotos.co
As far as scanning negatives are concerned, the end quality may be better, but the process is typically a lot slower, and you have to be careful handling the negatives. Also, scanners with the capability of batch-scanning negatives will be more expensive than those which can batch-scan photos.
Cheers,
LHerrou