134 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
134 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3600
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Title: HPR3600: Digitizing Photos
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3600/hpr3600.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:01:04
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3600 for Friday, the 20th of May 2022.
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Tid's show is entitled, digitizing photos and is part of the series Gimpit is hosted by Ouka
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and is about 13 minutes long and carries a clean flag. The summary is how to digitize old prints,
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slides and negatives. This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is Ouka. Welcome you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode in our Gimp
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series. Today, what I want to talk about is how you get your physical photographs, prints,
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slides, negatives, etc. into the computer. That means digitizing them. That's going to be the topic
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of this particular tutorial. Gimp is a digital photo editing program. Step one is to have your
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photos in digital form. Of course, any photos you take with your cell phone or with most
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contemporary cameras is already digital, so that does not a problem. But when my wife and I
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went on a trip to San Francisco in early 79 or on our honeymoon in late 79, we're on our trip
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to England in 1981. We were shooting film and we had even older photos than those that have
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meaning to us in our memories. Many of those old photos have problems which we would like to fix
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and Gimp is a great tool for doing that, but first we have to get them into digital formats.
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There's a number of ways to do that. First of all, the simplest, if you have money and don't
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want to tackle it yourself, you can use a service. There's a lot of them.
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Now, a few years ago, I retrieved a cache of home movies that my father had shot over the years
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and took the films to a local service to have them transferred to a DVD. I could then make copies
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with my DVD burner drive, gave them to my mother, my brothers and sisters as Christmas presents.
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Digitizing movie film was not something I wanted to take on. And the money at cost was
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well worth it in this case, but there is definitely a cost. I went with the straight transfer
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option, no editing or retouching, and it crossed me several hundreds of dollars.
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Now, you can do the same thing for still photos, slides, and negatives, but you're trading money
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for time in that case. So, what are some of the options? I did looking around. I found a place
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called Top 10 Reviews. They did a review of what they considered the five best scanning services.
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And, of course, all of these links are in the show notes. They said that Scan Digital was the best
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overall service. Ever present, they said was the best for choice. Scan Cafe was the best value
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for money. Go Photo was the best A la carte scanning service. Digital Memories was the best for
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online storage, and Scan My Photos, the best for speed of service. Now, the links in the show notes,
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you can read the article from Top 10 Reviews, and then links to individual reviews, etc. So,
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there's lots of way to get more information here. So, they said, these were what Top 10 Reviews
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said about these services, because I have no particular experience of them. I'm just presenting
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this information as a service. Now, I did note that on the Go Photo site, it says that they're
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merging with Scan Cafe. So, this might be the top five sites by the time you're listening to this.
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Now, as for storage plan, I tend to talk about storage. My intent is to do that in the next
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tutorial. Now, in reviewing this list, I noticed that it really is entirely US-centric, but that
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may simply be Google is only showing me US companies because it knows I'm in the US.
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So, in other countries, you might want to try a little search for something like Best Photo
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Scanning Service if you want to go in this direction. But again, the general rule is you're spending
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money to avoid spending time and effort if you use a service. So, you are the best judge of what
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you have more of. Now, when you have more time than money, the best option is really to scan at
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home and you have a number of options here. Some of the options you use equipment you may already
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have. Others can use inexpensive equipment. Now, I want to stress that I'm talking about options
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on the home hobbyist level. I have no doubt that this sort of person who does photo shoots with
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thousands of dollars worth of equipment would not be interested in the stuff that I'm talking about.
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I'm addressing the person who may have a few albums of old photos or even, you know,
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the old shoebox full of photos who wants to preserve them and maybe share them with family and
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friends. You really can do this inexpensively and in some cases for free if you already have the
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equipment. Now, I'm going to look at situations based on the media, prints, slides, and negatives.
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Those are the big three. Now, in most cases, the output will be JPEG photos, but for most purposes,
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this is good enough, particularly if we're talking about photos a few decades or more old.
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My photos with my wife go back to the late 1970s, for instance, and the quality is a lot less than
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what I can get now on my Pixel 3a phone. But, they're still important to us.
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Now, prints. This is the easiest of all because you likely have some of the equipment already.
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Your first option is your cell phone. There's a good app available from Google
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and it's available both on Android and iPhone devices called Photoscan by Google Photos.
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I put a link in the show notes to a review by PC Magazine. You can look at it, but it really is
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pretty simple. There are other options as well, such as Snap Seed, Instagram, and EverNote.
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All of which can also give you digital copies of your prints.
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The nice thing is it's not just limited to photographs. Back when the sort of thing mattered to me,
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I had a huge stack of business cards and I decided to just scan them in using the EverNote app so
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that I could store them digitally and be less cluttered. That worked perfectly well.
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You could use one of these things to scan in some postcards, maybe some ticket stubs,
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what other memorabilia that you have that you might want to hang onto,
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or at least have an image of. With the quality of cameras and smartphones these days,
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that might be all you need. Since most people have a smartphone these days, it makes sense to try
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it first. Now, the other main option for prints and so on is of course a flatbed scanner.
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Now, you can spend a fortune for one, but you don't have to. The kind you have at home,
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if you have one at home, probably does a decent enough job. I've found them for about $100
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where I am. They can also, in some cases, scan negatives. I have to say my experience with this
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has not been very good. If you have a scanner that can do this, you can of course try it out and see
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what you get. Your experience may be better. Slides and negatives. I'm going to take these together
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because they're so similar. We have a lot of slides. Most of the photos from our honeymoon,
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for instance, are slides. I remember that early on I got a Christmas present from my wife.
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It was a slide projector because we had this idea somehow that we were going to be looking at
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these slides over and over again and sharing them with friends and family. Well, okay, that didn't
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happen. The slides got put into trays, stored away in a closet, and we're coming up on our
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42nd wedding anniversary in just a few months. I think a lot of those photos have been
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traced for 40 years without anyone looking at them. The problem with digitizing slides is that
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you really need some equipment to do it. Again, I've seen flatbed scanners with slide attachments
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that should scan them, but I'm going to say my experience has not been good. You could spend a
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lot of money for professional grade equipment, but for the home hobbyists, there are some very
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affordable options that still produce decent results. The nice thing is that they all let you
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digitize negatives and slides. You can tackle both of these things with one device.
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Now again, top 10 reviews had a nice round up. They looked at four different devices.
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Wolverine Titan 8 and 1 was, they said, the best slide to digital image converter overall.
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That was going for about 150.
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Digit now, film scanner, the best value converter, only $50.
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Sharper image, slide a negative converter, which is the most portable option, that's about
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$100, and the Kodak Scanza, which has the largest storage option, and that was about $160.
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Now, all of these prices are quoted from Amazon as of the time I'm writing this,
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may have changed by the time that this thing comes out on hacker public radio.
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Now, as before, the recommendations about each one are what top 10 reviews said about them.
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For my money, the sweet spot is the choice between Wolverine and Kodak.
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They're about the same price. They're both pretty good. I've seen a number of reviews online
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that directly put them head to head, which tells you something. The one I have is the Kodak Scanza,
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and I like it. I have no doubt the Wolverine is a fine product. The reviews all say so.
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I think I got the Scanza on sale a few years back. It works well with a variety of formats,
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including 35mm, 126, 110 slides, and negatives. Comes with a variety of plastic trays into which
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the film is loaded, and you move the slide into position manually and scan in the image.
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The photos are saved as JPEG images and stored on an SD card. The SD card is not included,
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and I always have SD cards around. I consider it office supplies.
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Now, the interface can be set for a variety of languages,
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and as you move the tray through the device, you can see the image and line it up the way you want.
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Now, of course, I plan to do the real editing in GIMP, but it is nice that you can start with a
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well framed image. In one feature that is nice is you can flip the image either horizontally or
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vertically. Now, I know GIMP can do that perfectly well, but it's nice to have that feature.
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Now, in my case, I have an inexpensive card reader with a USB plug, so after I've scanned in a bunch of
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photos from negatives or slides, I just take the card out, put it into my USB
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plug card reader and copy them onto my computer. So, the bottom line is that digitizing photos does
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not need to be really difficult or very expensive. The only expense I had that I would not otherwise
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have is buying the scans up. I would have my Pixel 3A in any case, and scanning photos is just a
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bonus. But once you've scanned in your photos, however you do it, you need to consider storage,
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safety, and related workflow issues. And that's going to be the next topic I address. So,
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this is a hook-up for hacker public radio signing off and is always encouraging you to support
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free software. Bye-bye.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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