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How to scan old photos?
You need to scan a lot of old photos. Some of the photos will need to be retouched. I would like to scan the photo so that there is no question of re-scanning.
Photo prints are made on different types of photo paper (matte, glossy, textured). Some of the photos are damaged (cracks, tears, wrinkling, spots).
What scanning options would you recommend (Epson Stylus SX130 at hand)? What image format are you using for storage? What kind of know-how do you use with different types of photo paper and print damage to facilitate subsequent retouching?
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Recently scanned ALL albums. It took a couple of weeks (several thousand photos)
From experience:
Scanning at maximum resolution is really NOT necessary. Look over the pictures every ten years, and it’s important to just see what’s there, and not look out for crevices and moles. Therefore, 600 DPI is enough above the roof for all ordinary family photos, and for photos taken with a soap dish - 300 dpi for the eyes.
Separate photos for restoration, you can try to scan with a higher resolution, 1200, gently press, but you need to understand that if you start restoring yourself, then after 30-40 photos you will get tired of it, and you will understand that super-quality is not so important . Therefore, think carefully whether the photo is worth the extra effort, or whether it is in a common pile. Rare studio photos taken not on digital cameras can also be scanned at 1200.
Slides, filmstrips - 1200 was enough. a little blurry, but in fact the slides themselves do not give too much resolution, that is, when scanning a slide at 2400, the quality was not added much, and the size was many times greater. It's just uncomfortable to watch.
What you need to pay attention to:
1) The position of the photo on the scanner. The more evenly put, the more carefully close the lid, the smoother the photo will be, easier to crop, less work.
2) Immediately come up with cataloging. While the photo is being scanned, you can rename it, put it in the desired directory.
This is it - not so much.
gray_album/photo10.jpg
white_album/photo10.jpg Continuous
numbering is much better, especially if in the future photos will be transferred from folder to folder.
gray_album/photo10.jpg
white_album/photo20.jpg
Ideally, if the albums were kept correctly, then year-month-day_number.jpg. If this is hard, you can for example 2001-xx-xx-01.jpg, there will be at least a year.
with such a scanner, fortunately, you don’t need to worry about your question
scan to tiff / BMP with the maximum resolution, after processing in JPEG, of course
There is nothing tricky in scanning fingerprints, even more so with a regular office scanner. I would advise you to find films and scan them on a film scanner - there will be higher quality and take away some unprinted frames.
Of course, I didn’t understand anything from your request, at least they wrote what and where to insert, but I’ll try:
UPDATE `dbName`.`data` SET `success` = '$Success' WHERE `OrderId` = '$OrderId';
Help with the correct spelling of the request, there are many databases and you need to change the table field in them. persistent syntax errors
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