Hello,
I am currently attempting to scan numerous old photographs with the intention of digitizing them and printing copies for family members. I am not a photography buff or someone who has specialized knowledge in this field, but I am posing this question here in the hopes that the photography experts on this forum can offer some help. I assume that even though this is a photography forum, that many people here have experience with scanners and scanning prints.
I'm trying to keep my budget relatively low for this project, so I started out by purchasing a printer/scanner all-in-one, the Canon Pixma MP280. It's not professional equipment and I don't expect photo lab quality results. But I read good reviews of the MP280 and thought based on the reviews that I would try it out and see if it was good enough for my needs.
I am scanning most photos at either 300 or 600 dpi. I've tried both resolutions. The scanner does not appear to be picking up all the details in the photographs at either resolution. The image appears degraded, like the details are blurred to some extent.
I wondered what a photo lab quality scan would look like, so I took the same photograph that I had scanned at home to a photo lab and had them scan it. The quality of the photo lab scan was much better, all the details were really picked up in the scan.
The thing that is strange is that when I got the photo lab scan back, the file was a 400 kilobyte jpeg file and the file properties says it's only 96 dpi horizonal and vertical resolution. The scans that I have been doing at home are way bigger than that, they are like 30 megabytes, at least the 600 dpi scans are. Why would the photo lab scan be so much better in quality when the file size is so small and the resolution is so small compared to the scans that I have been doing at home? I thought that higher resolution yields a better scan? By the way, I scanned the same photo at home at approx. 96 dpi and the quality was absolutely horrible. What is going on here?
This Canon MP280 prints 4 x 6 photos very well if the digital image is high quality to begin with. For example, I printed a 4 x 6 of a digital photo that I found online, and the quality was exceptional. It was indistinguishable to me from a photo lab print. So I am confident that the printer on this machine will perform the task of printing high quality prints, so long as the original digital image is high quality. But I want to know why the scan quality is so poor and what I can do about it. Because I'm getting poor scans, so that is causing the print-outs to be poor quality as well.
I may have to buy a new scanner, but I don't know why I should have to. The scan resolution on the Canon MP280 goes up to 1200 x 2400 dpi, and most of the prints that I will be scanning will be scanned at 300 or 600 dpi, because from what I have read, it is pointless to scan prints at a higher resolution than 300 or 600 dpi because there is no more detail in a typical print than what you get at 300 dpi. It seems like overkill to buy a scanner with 4800 x 4800 resolution when all I'm doing is scanning prints that were probably printed at no more than 300 dpi. Why are my scans at 300 and 600 dpi not picking up all the details and colors in the original prints?
Any help would be appreciated. I will stay around to participate if anyone has more questions.
I am currently attempting to scan numerous old photographs with the intention of digitizing them and printing copies for family members. I am not a photography buff or someone who has specialized knowledge in this field, but I am posing this question here in the hopes that the photography experts on this forum can offer some help. I assume that even though this is a photography forum, that many people here have experience with scanners and scanning prints.
I'm trying to keep my budget relatively low for this project, so I started out by purchasing a printer/scanner all-in-one, the Canon Pixma MP280. It's not professional equipment and I don't expect photo lab quality results. But I read good reviews of the MP280 and thought based on the reviews that I would try it out and see if it was good enough for my needs.
I am scanning most photos at either 300 or 600 dpi. I've tried both resolutions. The scanner does not appear to be picking up all the details in the photographs at either resolution. The image appears degraded, like the details are blurred to some extent.
I wondered what a photo lab quality scan would look like, so I took the same photograph that I had scanned at home to a photo lab and had them scan it. The quality of the photo lab scan was much better, all the details were really picked up in the scan.
The thing that is strange is that when I got the photo lab scan back, the file was a 400 kilobyte jpeg file and the file properties says it's only 96 dpi horizonal and vertical resolution. The scans that I have been doing at home are way bigger than that, they are like 30 megabytes, at least the 600 dpi scans are. Why would the photo lab scan be so much better in quality when the file size is so small and the resolution is so small compared to the scans that I have been doing at home? I thought that higher resolution yields a better scan? By the way, I scanned the same photo at home at approx. 96 dpi and the quality was absolutely horrible. What is going on here?
This Canon MP280 prints 4 x 6 photos very well if the digital image is high quality to begin with. For example, I printed a 4 x 6 of a digital photo that I found online, and the quality was exceptional. It was indistinguishable to me from a photo lab print. So I am confident that the printer on this machine will perform the task of printing high quality prints, so long as the original digital image is high quality. But I want to know why the scan quality is so poor and what I can do about it. Because I'm getting poor scans, so that is causing the print-outs to be poor quality as well.
I may have to buy a new scanner, but I don't know why I should have to. The scan resolution on the Canon MP280 goes up to 1200 x 2400 dpi, and most of the prints that I will be scanning will be scanned at 300 or 600 dpi, because from what I have read, it is pointless to scan prints at a higher resolution than 300 or 600 dpi because there is no more detail in a typical print than what you get at 300 dpi. It seems like overkill to buy a scanner with 4800 x 4800 resolution when all I'm doing is scanning prints that were probably printed at no more than 300 dpi. Why are my scans at 300 and 600 dpi not picking up all the details and colors in the original prints?
Any help would be appreciated. I will stay around to participate if anyone has more questions.
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