In the UK we had a children's programme screened in the 60s and 70s called Blue Peter, one of my favourite programmes when I was a kid. They would do things like this twice a week., showing us young children how to make toys and games out of cardboard and empty squeezy bottles that held cleaners and dishwashing liquids, toliet rolls, sellotape and anything else around the house. I loved it. You've just taken me back to my childhood and you've helped me solve my own negative scaneing problem. All power to you. Great tutorial. I especially like the tuna cans solution.
I just spent a whole frustrating evening trying to setup my camera on a tripod, putting film in a specially designed loader/holder (which sucked) and taking shots of my negatives. And here you are with a box and two cans of tuna. I love it! Thank you sir for pulling me out of a rabbit hole!
I have to say that i was looking to buy a $150 to $190 scanner... but this i just Aswesome, and no i'm not being sarcastic, it works, and you sir have saved me good money, thank you :)
I just got a nice nice slide scanner. I'm glad I waited until I could afford one because now I have all these slides and I'm finally going to do this the right way so I don't have to do it again. At my age that is priceless.
This is by far the BEST practical advice I have ever seen on TH-cam regarding slide scanning. And it WORKS. I have over 500 slides that I took on a trip to England, Scotland and Wales 25 years ago. At the time, I had 100 of the slides converted to Kodak PhotoCD, a process no longer available. Somehow I managed to misplace the PhotoCD and have no other digital copies of the 100 slides. So as I was contemplating sending a couple hundred of my precious slides off to ScanCafe and laying out another $100+, I came across this video. Using a light table (which I already owned), a ceramic coffee mug for the stand-off, and my iPhone 7 Plus, I was able to confirm that Jeff's technique works very nicely. I haven't tried this with film negatives, but I'm guessing a small pane of glass added to the mix to keep the negative flat is all that's missing. Thanks Jeff!
In case this helps others, I had to remember before snapping the shot to select the optimal exposure. On the iPhone it's a matter of touching the spot that you want to be be the middle of the exposure curve. It can make a big difference in overall quality of the digital transfer.
This method works amazing. I was trying other methods and pictures were dark or blurry. I followed this setup and the results are clear, proper colors, and bright. I found a "white background display" online to use on my tablet. Thank you for the video, fantastic!!
Thank you for the compliment! I like Ron Swanson. My wife says the resemblance is Tom Selleck, but I will gladly take Ron Swanson! Thank you for watching and commenting!
I am SOOO happy right now. I have boxes of 120 format slides - which are 2.75" x 2.75". NONE of the scanners support this slide size. There's a service online that will do it for $2 per slide!!! This just saved me so much money!
One of the Best Practical TH-cam I have ever seen on any subject. Great way to prototype and use what is around you. You saved me money. I was going to get my film developed with print for $12 dollars and now I can just get the Negatives to $6.
This is exactly what I needed to digitize the negatives my late father brought back from India during WWII that he took with, I think, a Brownie camera. You can imagine what this might mean to me. And I love DIY that's cheap and works and is faintly ridiculous but did I mention it works? I couldn't even find a commercial unit at any price that seemed to fit the job. Well done!
Real men of genius!!!! Upon seeing your hat, I was like this guy definitely drives an old Grand Cherokee Woody. I was mildly disappointed to see the black and white of the Commander lol. Regardless, you are awesome! I teach high school film photography (which is quite difficult during covid) and this saved my remote learners and is going to allow them to scan at home without major investment. I gave all of my virtual students the Ilford mailing envelopes from B&H and I failed to realize that physical prints were not included in the price, so you my friend saved the day. Thank you!
What a fantastic video. Everything is so simple and basic, and even someone as lo-tech as myself found it so easy to use. I can't thank you enough, it has saved me a fortune!
Reading through the comments smiling the entire time, I decided to see if there was anything negative...and apparently there are 157 people who suffer from dyslexia and mistakingly pushed the thumbs down button. So congratulation's on 100 % likes. I look forward to trying this out. Thank You and God Bless you for taking the time to share your knowledge
I love all the household solutions for scanning negatives there are. The low-cost, store-bought slide scanners just don't do these old priceless photos justice. I used a tripod head, with a clamp (so I could turn it 90 degrees), attached it to an LP record stand, and set a daylight simulator (for enhancing mood during the winter months) underneath it. I just like seeing other people's solutions so I might improve my own. Well done!
thank you so much for your tips, my dad was a keen photographer, he developed his own films and printed them, I have quite a few 59 plus year old negatives which i would love to share with the family and at last after seeing your video I might be able to do this. Thank you again
Sir, you are my people! I'm notorious for doing stuff like this, but I had not yet figured out a good way to digitize my negs and slides, and you've nailed it! Thanks so much for this video, and for getting right to the point! So many videos start out with 5 minutes of yakking about nothing. Great job! You're a genius! :)
idk why some people disregard these cheap methods to scan. I know it won't have an excellent quality, but i won't spend hundreds of dollars just to do it the "right" way. Loved the video
I've been doing something like that but I've had the pixels from the ipad bleeding through. Thanks for the tips!!! I have larger negatives than any of the machines that I've found, but don't want to spend so much money on a new expensive scanner that will do them. This looks perfect!
Try the tip just above your comment, it may help with pixels bleeding through: put a white plastic garbage bag or few plastic bags (taught) on the ipad screen before the glass
I just saw this video and thought it was great, i have a ton of negatives to scan from relatives that have passed and I will use this process to see how it works. Thank you for the video.
Not sure you will see this comment since your video is two years old. I found an old projector of my parents with slides at least 75 years old. The projector no longer worked. I tried your little contraption and could not believe how easy it was to work and how well the pictures turned out. Thank you
I love you, Jeffrey! You are a "hands down" genius! Because of YOU I'm revisiting slides of my artwork from @35 years back, and am able to easily share their images with my five grown children (37 > 24 yo)--who have never seen artwork I did "in my prime", before I had to work full-time to raise my family!
Thank you so much for posting this technique. I just used it ....and took and awesome picture of my dad from 1971 off an old slide. And it came out beautifully.
Can’t wait for the winter with more time to experiment with the old slides I have. I enjoy trying to work out practical solutions, I’m 83 so it was what we had to do all those years ago here in the UK, I guess it was no different “over there”? I thank you for the video, I think it’s brilliant.
Just saw this video. wonderful innovation. Can't wait to try this. Got 35 years of negatives. Will get back after I have tried scanning some negatives. Bangalore, INDIA
I used a Samsung Galaxy S21 phone with my MacBook Pro and Photoshop with awesome results. Easy and fast! Had to improvise on the props for height and plane but the focus was right on! High enough resolution for the purpose (PowerPoint presentation through a projector). So Genius! Thank you, Mr. Howard!
Thx,Mr Jeffrey. I have tons of negatives,both colour ñ b/w. I will try this. I have seen other scanner procedures but this one is easy and triable. Lemme see,thx. Your pic looked really good ,I must say. Clear, with good tone and texture. Memories are so priceless and valuable. Moments don't come back but still through these pictures one can relive them. That's magic.thx.
This is brilliant. I have a scanner but it's a hassle to unpack and use, and the phones are so good now that the images will be totally useable. You solved the 'squareness' problem so simply. Thanks!
$5 dollars? I have thousands of old family negatives, I took 4 negatives to a professional and I spent $50 dollars! I then bought a Sharper image machine for $59 and did all of my 35 mm film and I was happy with that but it did not do the old negatives which was my ultimate goal. Will be trying this method out later this week and hopefully save thousands of dollars. Wish me luck!
2 cans of tuna are great, I am using a Samsung Note 10 phone, and the slide scanning is easy as cake to do now, thanks very much for taking the time. DollarTree locally now has 11x14 frames for even bigger panels of glass that I use 2 of to sandwich negatives with, I'll use the two cans of tuna for that process too.
Jeffery or should I call Yankee Ingenuity, this is one of the best easy to understand and easy to Do It Your Self videos available recycled box and tuna cans, plus picture glass from the 99 Cents Store or Dollar Tree, it is truly Yankee Ingenuity.
Brilliant! Just brilliant! I was looking to scan some negatives and thought, there has to be a FASTER and CHEAPER way to do a bunch. This checks all the boxes, and the investment is a couple cans of tuna (cat food in my case)! Thank you for taking the time to post this.
Thank you so much! My film was so old that no store would scan it for me. I've now been able to salvage it myself into some (not too terrible) looking images from my vacation!
K.I.S.S. Keep it Simple Stupid. It was what I taught my Photography students for forty years. Jeffery Howard does just that on this simple but effective way of scanning images. No fancy or expensive boxes or electronic device. It's just simple . Ask yourself.. What are your objectives? Just pulling the camera away from the light table to eliminate the pixels is once again. Simple. Great video and good job.
Dear Jeffrey, This tutorial was so helpful and effective. You have such a great way of teaching in a way that is clear and kind. Thanks for saving me a few bucks and for all the help. I highly recommend this tutorial to anyone who comes upon it.
Jeffery...... you have saved me a lot of money. Despite me laughing when you said “2 tins of Tuna”, your brilliant idea works. 👍🏻 I’ve recently got back into B&W film photography & when one of my friends said she couldn’t wait to see the images on Instagram...... I thought, “how the hell am I gonna get them onto my MacBook “ You showed me the cost effective & easy way. Thank you so much 😊
For a blank white screen, typing about:blank into a web browser will open a blank white page. There are free apps, such as Negative Image that will invert the negatives.
Works great! For 1Phone 14 pro I'm getting best resolution from a single tuna can. The only issue is a bit of reflection of the shiny camera housing area of the phone reflecting on the surface of the slide, only noticeable with a black background. Thanks for the vid!
This is the best DIY video. THANK YOU! I've even shared this with my Facebook friends and they can't wait to get going on their old negatives. The B&W ones turn out pretty decent; the colored ones, however, need to be tweaked and I don't have the patience for that so I turn them into B&W. If you have an easy way to get the color looking decent, please share! I have found, too, I have to finagle a bit to reduce glare and the bathroom works pretty good for that. So thankful I don't have to hunt down a place to do this for me and then risk damage to the negatives or having them lost/not returned.
My good man that was a terrific solution, not to mention free. It’s so quick compared to any other process that I’ve tried. Thanks so much for your efforts.
Or.. just get a piece of opaque 1/4" plastic from the hardware store and place that on top of the iPad. That will diffuse the light and eliminate the pixels from the screen created with the white paper technique you mentioned. You can then rid of q the US mailbox and place the glass on top of that! 👍
I have been converting old 5x7 negatives from a press camera... All I do is us the laptop screen as a light box I tape with blue tap the negative to the screen I use my Canon 50 and sit back far enough from the laptop... I pull the negative in with the zoom , and take a photo of the negative I then take the SD card , and run the negatives through a photo shop , convert and adjust with the photo shop I have not had trouble with the negatives , and the pixles as you were saying It could be that the negative film is thicker than a regular camera negative I can not do colored film, because it is thin, and it pixelates out ... But B&W work fine with attaching the negative flat side down on to the laptop , I do not lay the laptop down...it is open like normal Thanks for sharing your way ... but to me it's a bit cumbersome, when you can use just the laptop scree
Thanks man that's a good idea. i like the two glass panels part , to hold the film and keep it flat. thats the m8st creative part. i might use my nikon camera on tripod ,instead of smartphone.
Thank you Jim Sollows. I never thought of that. I will try that this week and report back on my results. I love film photography and I really enjoy hearing a new idea on how to do things.
When I used shopping bags, sometimes we could wrinkles in the bags through the negative. Then we tried a white plastic garbage bag and it seemed to work very well.
What a simple and creative home-hold solution to scanning old negatives. Its make shift but totally awesome, and it works. Thank you for this video. Great job!
Thanks for commenting. I have tried white plastic garbage bag and a white shopping bag. It worked pretty well for me unless there even a tiny imperfection or wrinkle in the bag itself. Since the bag is in (or very close to) the plane of focus, any imperfection really shows up.
@@JefferyAHoward instagram.com/p/BsZeexFFH5E/?igshid=1cupnyfwnacph this is with loads of wrinkles in the bag but my tablet has a low resolution and thus some pixels are still visible, next time I will do it with my phone
I have been a photographer for over 45 year, spent big bucks for gear and you use two tuna cans, 2 sheets of glass and a box . You are the MAN .
Thank you for the kind words and thanks for watching.
I had to laugh when you said, "Now ya take 2 cans of Tuna…", but it works! Great tutorial man!
Agreed. This guy is so endearing and smart!
13 feet of 20lb monofilament fishing line, 1 Flowbee and two cast iron skillets
Do you recommend white or pink tuna?
Me too! Love this! ♥️
it's brilliant though! lol
We need more people like you on youtube
Thank you for commenting and thanks for the kind words of encouragement. I am happy you liked the video.
Seriously
Thanks
I absolutely agree 👍🏻
Jeffery A Howard yeah this truly is a great video, AND your accent sounds just like my dads side of the family in the south it’s great👍🏼
In the UK we had a children's programme screened in the 60s and 70s called Blue Peter, one of my favourite programmes when I was a kid. They would do things like this twice a week., showing us young children how to make toys and games out of cardboard and empty squeezy bottles that held cleaners and dishwashing liquids, toliet rolls, sellotape and anything else around the house. I loved it. You've just taken me back to my childhood and you've helped me solve my own negative scaneing problem. All power to you. Great tutorial. I especially like the tuna cans solution.
Thank you for watching and commenting. I really appreciate the positive feedback!
I just spent a whole frustrating evening trying to setup my camera on a tripod, putting film in a specially designed loader/holder (which sucked) and taking shots of my negatives. And here you are with a box and two cans of tuna. I love it! Thank you sir for pulling me out of a rabbit hole!
I have to say that i was looking to buy a $150 to $190 scanner... but this i just Aswesome, and no i'm not being sarcastic, it works, and you sir have saved me good money, thank you :)
It is rare to see an instructional video that marries common sense, intelligence and humor. Well done, Mr. Howard!
Thank you for watching and thanks for the kind words.
this man is a genius who saved me 200 euros
I just got a nice nice slide scanner. I'm glad I waited until I could afford one because now I have all these slides and I'm finally going to do this the right way so I don't have to do it again. At my age that is priceless.
You are welcome!
This is by far the BEST practical advice I have ever seen on TH-cam regarding slide scanning. And it WORKS. I have over 500 slides that I took on a trip to England, Scotland and Wales 25 years ago. At the time, I had 100 of the slides converted to Kodak PhotoCD, a process no longer available. Somehow I managed to misplace the PhotoCD and have no other digital copies of the 100 slides. So as I was contemplating sending a couple hundred of my precious slides off to ScanCafe and laying out another $100+, I came across this video. Using a light table (which I already owned), a ceramic coffee mug for the stand-off, and my iPhone 7 Plus, I was able to confirm that Jeff's technique works very nicely. I haven't tried this with film negatives, but I'm guessing a small pane of glass added to the mix to keep the negative flat is all that's missing. Thanks Jeff!
Thank you for commenting. It is great to hear this scanning method is helping somebody to preserve and enjoy their film photos or slides.
In case this helps others, I had to remember before snapping the shot to select the optimal exposure. On the iPhone it's a matter of touching the spot that you want to be be the middle of the exposure curve. It can make a big difference in overall quality of the digital transfer.
This method works amazing. I was trying other methods and pictures were dark or blurry. I followed this setup and the results are clear, proper colors, and bright. I found a "white background display" online to use on my tablet. Thank you for the video, fantastic!!
Thank you.
you could pass as a look-alike for Ron Swanson from the TV show Parks and Recreation LOL!
Thank you for the compliment! I like Ron Swanson. My wife says the resemblance is Tom Selleck, but I will gladly take Ron Swanson! Thank you for watching and commenting!
lol
its funny cause I imagine Ron Swanson doesnt use a digital camera and develops his own film
I am SOOO happy right now. I have boxes of 120 format slides - which are 2.75" x 2.75". NONE of the scanners support this slide size. There's a service online that will do it for $2 per slide!!! This just saved me so much money!
I am very happy this video helped you scan your film. Thank you for commenting and thank you for the kind words.
Thank You, I was looking for a DIY on how to scan my 35mm negatives, without having to go out and buy something. TY VM.
You are welcome!
One of the Best Practical TH-cam I have ever seen on any subject. Great way to prototype and use what is around you. You saved me money. I was going to get my film developed with print for $12 dollars and now I can just get the Negatives to $6.
This is exactly what I needed to digitize the negatives my late father brought back from India during WWII that he took with, I think, a Brownie camera. You can imagine what this might mean to me. And I love DIY that's cheap and works and is faintly ridiculous but did I mention it works? I couldn't even find a commercial unit at any price that seemed to fit the job. Well done!
Thanks for commenting. I am happy this helped you to scan your photos.
Real men of genius!!!! Upon seeing your hat, I was like this guy definitely drives an old Grand Cherokee Woody. I was mildly disappointed to see the black and white of the Commander lol. Regardless, you are awesome! I teach high school film photography (which is quite difficult during covid) and this saved my remote learners and is going to allow them to scan at home without major investment. I gave all of my virtual students the Ilford mailing envelopes from B&H and I failed to realize that physical prints were not included in the price, so you my friend saved the day. Thank you!
Thank you so much for watching, and for the kind words.
What a fantastic video. Everything is so simple and basic, and even someone as lo-tech as myself found it so easy to use. I can't thank you enough, it has saved me a fortune!
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching.
Reading through the comments smiling the entire time, I decided to see if there was anything negative...and apparently there are 157 people who suffer from dyslexia and mistakingly pushed the thumbs down button. So congratulation's on 100 % likes. I look forward to trying this out. Thank You and God Bless you for taking the time to share your knowledge
Thank you for watching and thank you so much for the kind words.
I love all the household solutions for scanning negatives there are. The low-cost, store-bought slide scanners just don't do these old priceless photos justice. I used a tripod head, with a clamp (so I could turn it 90 degrees), attached it to an LP record stand, and set a daylight simulator (for enhancing mood during the winter months) underneath it. I just like seeing other people's solutions so I might improve my own. Well done!
thank you so much for your tips, my dad was a keen photographer, he developed his own films and printed them, I have quite a few 59 plus year old negatives which i would love to share with the family and at last after seeing your video I might be able to do this. Thank you again
You are very welcome and thank you for watching and commenting!
You are the kind of man I want to be for my children. A practical genius.
Achek Yule Thank you for commenting, and thank you for the kind words. I’m glad you enjoyed the video.
Sir, you are my people! I'm notorious for doing stuff like this, but I had not yet figured out a good way to digitize my negs and slides, and you've nailed it! Thanks so much for this video, and for getting right to the point! So many videos start out with 5 minutes of yakking about nothing.
Great job! You're a genius! :)
Thank you Jolynn! That is a wonderful comment. I am glad this scanning method helped you.
Definitely my kinda guy/method. @@JefferyAHoward
idk why some people disregard these cheap methods to scan. I know it won't have an excellent quality, but i won't spend hundreds of dollars just to do it the "right" way. Loved the video
Those cans of tunas are legit game changers
Jeff, you made my day. I'm going to make one of these tomorrow. All tutorials should be this much fun
I am glad you enjoyed the video, and thank you for commenting.
Give this man a gold medal !! 🏅
This is absolutely genius!!
Thank you for the kind words.
I've been doing something like that but I've had the pixels from the ipad bleeding through. Thanks for the tips!!! I have larger negatives than any of the machines that I've found, but don't want to spend so much money on a new expensive scanner that will do them. This looks perfect!
Try the tip just above your comment, it may help with pixels bleeding through: put a white plastic garbage bag or few plastic bags (taught) on the ipad screen before the glass
I love this, a guy with real ingenuity, this is for many people on a budget a real WORKING solution, thanks for sharing!
Jeffrey you are a genius. In a just world you would be able to retire as a minor national hero on an idea this simple and effective.
I just saw this video and thought it was great, i have a ton of negatives to scan from relatives that have passed and I will use this process to see how it works. Thank you for the video.
Glad it was helpful!
Not sure you will see this comment since your video is two years old. I found an old projector of my parents with slides at least 75 years old. The projector no longer worked. I tried your little contraption and could not believe how easy it was to work and how well the pictures turned out. Thank you
You are very welcome, and thank you for commenting.
“Two cans of tuna are enough for your iPhone” it’s something I definitely would love to hear from Tim Cook at an Apple launch event 😂
For home and family use, it sounds fantastic. Your explanation of how color works is great.
I love you, Jeffrey! You are a "hands down" genius! Because of YOU I'm revisiting slides of my artwork from @35 years back, and am able to easily share their images with my five grown children (37 > 24 yo)--who have never seen artwork I did "in my prime", before I had to work full-time to raise my family!
Thank you for watching and for the kind words! I am very happy this helped you scan you photos.
Thank you so much for posting this technique. I just used it ....and took and awesome picture of my dad from 1971 off an old slide. And it came out beautifully.
That is awesome! Thank you commenting!
Can’t wait for the winter with more time to experiment with the old slides I have. I enjoy trying to work out practical solutions, I’m 83 so it was what we had to do all those years ago here in the UK, I guess it was no different “over there”? I thank you for the video, I think it’s brilliant.
Just saw this video. wonderful innovation. Can't wait to try this. Got 35 years of negatives. Will get back after I have tried scanning some negatives. Bangalore, INDIA
I used a Samsung Galaxy S21 phone with my MacBook Pro and Photoshop with awesome results. Easy and fast! Had to improvise on the props for height and plane but the focus was right on! High enough resolution for the purpose (PowerPoint presentation through a projector). So Genius! Thank you, Mr. Howard!
What settings did you use on the phone camera? Does it it have to be in macro mode?
Talk about American ingenuity ! I ,too, like the introduction of the tuna- can platform to photography. Great photo of the Beetle pickup.
Thx,Mr Jeffrey. I have tons of negatives,both colour ñ b/w. I will try this. I have seen other scanner procedures but this one is easy and triable. Lemme see,thx. Your pic looked really good ,I must say. Clear, with good tone and texture. Memories are so priceless and valuable. Moments don't come back but still through these pictures one can relive them. That's magic.thx.
Jeffery. You are love. You are light. But seriously, thank you for this tutorial!
I'm about to become a legend in my family! Thanks for the knowledge Jeffery
I've always wanted a film camera but scared of the cost of scanning film to digital. You're amaaaaazing!
Thank you so much for watching, and for the nice comment. I hope this helps you to enjoy shooting more film.
This is brilliant. I have a scanner but it's a hassle to unpack and use, and the phones are so good now that the images will be totally useable. You solved the 'squareness' problem so simply. Thanks!
Does it work for 120 negs as well?
Good ol' Yankee ingenuity is alive and well. I love it. Thanks a million, Jeff.
I was told today each scan would cost me $5 :-o Very happy to try with some cans of tuna!
$5 dollars? I have thousands of old family negatives, I took 4 negatives to a professional and I spent $50 dollars! I then bought a Sharper image machine for $59 and did all of my 35 mm film and I was happy with that but it did not do the old negatives which was my ultimate goal. Will be trying this method out later this week and hopefully save thousands of dollars. Wish me luck!
@@nancypluskids how did your experience go? Very time consuming? Does it work? I hope it turned out great!
Very creative use of common parts.
Jeffery, you're a star. Take a bow! Thank you for a great, informative video.
Wow, thanks! I am glad you liked the video and thank you so much for the kind words!
So $2 for picture frames and maybe $7 for a few cans of tuna and I’ve saved $150?! Count me in! This is brilliant. Thank you. 🙂
Thanks for watching and commenting!
2 cans of tuna are great, I am using a Samsung Note 10 phone, and the slide scanning is easy as cake to do now, thanks very much for taking the time. DollarTree locally now has 11x14 frames for even bigger panels of glass that I use 2 of to sandwich negatives with, I'll use the two cans of tuna for that process too.
Thanks for commenting. I am glad this video helped.
Jeffery or should I call Yankee Ingenuity, this is one of the best easy to understand and easy to Do It Your Self videos available recycled box and tuna cans, plus picture glass from the 99 Cents Store or Dollar Tree, it is truly Yankee Ingenuity.
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Brilliant! Just brilliant! I was looking to scan some negatives and thought, there has to be a FASTER and CHEAPER way to do a bunch. This checks all the boxes, and the investment is a couple cans of tuna (cat food in my case)! Thank you for taking the time to post this.
Hello from Ireland. Thank you Jeffery - great video. Simple engineering - I love it!! Super helpful. I hope you and yours are well. Stay safe.
"Regular" tuna cans, priceless! LOL! Love this, many thanks for sharing this great tutorial!
I don’t like tuna, so I’m going to try a can of peas later. It should be about the same height as two tuna cans?
Brilliant. Thank you so much. I can now stop searching on how to scan my old negatives
Thank you so much! My film was so old that no store would scan it for me. I've now been able to salvage it myself into some (not too terrible) looking images from my vacation!
K.I.S.S. Keep it Simple Stupid. It was what I taught my Photography students for forty years. Jeffery Howard does just that on this simple but effective way of scanning images. No fancy or expensive boxes or electronic device. It's just simple . Ask yourself.. What are your objectives? Just pulling the camera away from the light table to eliminate the pixels is once again. Simple. Great video and good job.
Great video. Short and sweet. Thanks for the idea.
Glad you liked it!
damn dude, you're the man!
Thank you so much for the kind comment. I hope this helped you scan your negatives.
So glad I stumbled across your video. I noticed you haven't uploaded in a year. I'm subscribing and hoping that you'll start uploading again.
I am producing new videos that will be uploading later this month.
Dear Jeffrey,
This tutorial was so helpful and effective. You have such a great way of teaching in a way that is clear and kind. Thanks for saving me a few bucks and for all the help. I highly recommend this tutorial to anyone who comes upon it.
This is amazing!! I've saved so much than buying a pricey scanner and even developing in stores! Thank you so much!
This is so simple and yet so effective! Thank you. The tuna can part made me laugh, but that's some great improvising!
I thought this was a piss take at first. Its pure class. Some man
Jeffery...... you have saved me a lot of money. Despite me laughing when you said “2 tins of Tuna”, your brilliant idea works. 👍🏻 I’ve recently got back into B&W film photography & when one of my friends said she couldn’t wait to see the images on Instagram...... I thought, “how the hell am I gonna get them onto my MacBook “ You showed me the cost effective & easy way. Thank you so much 😊
Thank you for watching and commenting. It is great to hear that this video helped you to enjoy and share your photos!
For a blank white screen, typing about:blank into a web browser will open a blank white page. There are free apps, such as Negative Image that will invert the negatives.
Great tutorial, gave it a go the other day ,just hand held for a one off frame , quite impressed with the result .
Glad it helped
Good old American ingenuity! Love this! Excellent tutorial.
Thank you for commenting and thank you for the kind words!
I have hundreds of negative from generations of my family I was given from from my grandma.i can't wait to try this.
💝💝 old family pictures!
Works great! For 1Phone 14 pro I'm getting best resolution from a single tuna can. The only issue is a bit of reflection of the shiny camera housing area of the phone reflecting on the surface of the slide, only noticeable with a black background. Thanks for the vid!
This is the best DIY video. THANK YOU! I've even shared this with my Facebook friends and they can't wait to get going on their old negatives. The B&W ones turn out pretty decent; the colored ones, however, need to be tweaked and I don't have the patience for that so I turn them into B&W. If you have an easy way to get the color looking decent, please share! I have found, too, I have to finagle a bit to reduce glare and the bathroom works pretty good for that. So thankful I don't have to hunt down a place to do this for me and then risk damage to the negatives or having them lost/not returned.
Thank you for watching and commenting. I am happy this helped you scan your negatives.
My good man that was a terrific solution, not to mention free. It’s so quick compared to any other process that I’ve tried. Thanks so much for your efforts.
Or.. just get a piece of opaque 1/4" plastic from the hardware store and place that on top of the iPad. That will diffuse the light and eliminate the pixels from the screen created with the white paper technique you mentioned. You can then rid of q the US mailbox and place the glass on top of that! 👍
So cool. Much faster than a scanner and a very good result. 👍👍👍
Thank you for watching. I agree it is faster than my Epson Scanner.
Love, Love this video! I was recently given some old family negatives...and this is absolutely a great idea. Thank you so much.
Wow excellent thing I learn from this video. thanks
Thank you!
OMG, you're like the Macgyver of photo restoration. Thank you!
Thank you for watching and commenting! I really appreciate you taking time to watch my video!
Thank you Jeffrey.
I like clever and simple, but that's genius!
You are very welcome.Thank you for watching.
I have been converting old 5x7 negatives from a press camera...
All I do is us the laptop screen as a light box
I tape with blue tap the negative to the screen
I use my Canon 50 and sit back far enough from the laptop...
I pull the negative in with the zoom , and take a photo of the negative
I then take the SD card , and run the negatives through a photo shop ,
convert and adjust with the photo shop
I have not had trouble with the negatives , and the pixles as you were saying
It could be that the negative film is thicker than a regular camera negative
I can not do colored film, because it is thin, and it pixelates out ...
But B&W work fine with attaching the negative flat side down on to the laptop ,
I do not lay the laptop down...it is open like normal
Thanks for sharing your way ... but to me it's a bit cumbersome, when you can use just
the laptop scree
Clever!!! Thanks for the idea!!! Now I can digitize those negative I took and developed 50 years ago!!!!!
Excellent!
Well done that man! I have a light box and the tuna can trick is genius!
Great idea , well explained ...Thanks a lot. I shall be trying this with my wife's suitcase of old photos tomorrow! (from Cornwall UK)
Charles, thank you for commenting. I hope this helps with your photos.
Great video; thanks for doing all the work figuring out how to do this!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for commenting.
Thanks for the additional and very helpful info Jeffery on the slide process, it's definitely a method I'll try via iPhoneI
Thanks man that's a good idea.
i like the two glass panels part , to hold the film and keep it flat.
thats the m8st creative part.
i might use my nikon camera on tripod ,instead of smartphone.
Im excited to get this started thank you!
Thank for watching and commenting.
Ingenious, thanks a lot. I have hundreds of negatives from times gone bye.
Glad I could help. Thank you for watching.
An alternative to the box is to put a layer or two of white plastic (grocery bag) between the ipad and glass.
Thank you Jim Sollows. I never thought of that. I will try that this week and report back on my results. I love film photography and I really enjoy hearing a new idea on how to do things.
When I used shopping bags, sometimes we could wrinkles in the bags through the negative. Then we tried a white plastic garbage bag and it seemed to work very well.
@@JefferyAHoward Don't you get "Thank you" and "Come Again" on your negatives?
Your trial and comment is really practical and useful! Thank you!!! Seoul, Korea
What a brilliant tutorial, thank you for all your time spent designing and putting the video together, good man. Subscribed
Thanks for the sub! Thanks for watching and thanks for the kind words!
Total genius tons of old negatives to do and I can't wait to try this
What a simple and creative home-hold solution to scanning old negatives. Its make shift but totally awesome, and it works. Thank you for this video. Great job!
Lalo Amigo, Thank you so much for watching and I also thank you for the kind comment.
I have an old old scanner that does the film but I just happened upon this video and loved it. Thanks for posting
What I did was to cut a piece of white plastic from a bag and use that to difuse the pixels. I'm going to try your way soon, thanks for your tutorial!
Thanks for commenting. I have tried white plastic garbage bag and a white shopping bag. It worked pretty well for me unless there even a tiny imperfection or wrinkle in the bag itself. Since the bag is in (or very close to) the plane of focus, any imperfection really shows up.
@@JefferyAHoward i tend to overexpose a little and it fixes it, my problem is really the dust, it's really visible on all my shots :(
@@JefferyAHoward instagram.com/p/BsZeexFFH5E/?igshid=1cupnyfwnacph
this is with loads of wrinkles in the bag but my tablet has a low resolution and thus some pixels are still visible, next time I will do it with my phone
the simplest method. Brilliant Big Thank you
Love this - Thanks Jeffery - saved a world crisis in our home :)
Any specific brand of tuna cans would work better? Just kidding. Thank you for the tips,they really help.