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 Pictures: Scan to Digital (albums) 
		
		
		I've got decades of photos that I want to place into digital albums. 
	I've got digital photos to catalog, but so far the software I've seen is clumsy. What's the best scanner or device ? What's a good program (not pro quality/price) ? Not looking for freeware, just a good program with basic features. Not looking to get fancy with editing the photos, maybe titles and music. What do people do with their old SLR Nikon cameras ? Same vintage as a Corvair. Can it be donated?  | 
		
 If you have a lot of photos, set up a tripod and use a decent digital camera to shot photos of the photos. A scanner will take you forever to scan them all.  
	Set up the camera pointing straight down and set up two soft lights and start making copies. It is tedious and slow but way better than a scanner.  | 
		
 I'm glad I asked. I never would have thought to do it that way. 
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 Here's how I set up my camera with a micro-nikkor lens to get shots of slides. 
	I used a picture of a light on the laptop screen as the light source. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1451622900.jpg The mylar on the laptop screen diffuses the light so it's even and hides the matrix the screen is made of which you can see thru the slide. I'd happily take your old Nikon off your hands. =;>)  | 
		
 Great idea. I've been wondering for years how to do it affordably.  
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 I've just persevered with the scanner.  I think probably slightly quicker that with the camera.  Just work out a process and chug your way through them. 
	GF's old uncle has just died so I've got a whole lot of her family photos to scan then print for her to take to the funeral on Wednesday.  | 
		
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 Years ago, I sent negatives and some actual photos to scancafe.com.  Not bad for personal photos, but not high res.  I'm sure there are other competitors now. 
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 If the photos will lay flat you can "scan" or capture a photo in one second or less. Just put down a layer of masking tape on two sides as a guide for where to position the photo. The real challenge is curly photos. Then you need to do some engineering. Make a baseboard that has a series of holes in it and hook it to a vacuum cleaner for suction. Now you have a vacuum board to help flatten curly photos. It is more work to build and setup but shooting one photo per second you can smoke through a pile of photos in no time. The real problem is the digital naming convention and how you archive the files. How will your kids or grandkids access those photos in 20 or 40 years. I have prints from my grandparents honeymoon . I don't know how to keep the digital files forever.  | 
		
 One can only hope that .jpg tiff and the other standards will last... somehow.... I'm going through my grandfathers photos from pre ww1 in France. Fascinating. He was a great shot too. 
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 All in one printer/scanner/fax are not the best in quality. 
	Using a camera seems to be more of a hassle. I have used many scanners. The current one is an Epson V500: good clarity, plenty of adjustments, can double as a low res copier in a pinch. I back it up with Photoshop Elements: lightweight so quicker, easy enough to use, plenty of features for the non-pro. Use higher res - you can always lower it later. I use higher res and take time to edit important photos and rip through less important or smaller pics with lower res. Suggestion: for faster work (but it will lower quality), scan multiple photos at once and use the editing software to cut them up into individual files.  | 
		
 Storage...makes me ask the question: 
	What is the best technology(hardware) to store the digital photos ? External hard drive linked by FireWire ? I'm sure I'm dating myself.  | 
		
 Google offers free storage for pix below 16 megapixels I think. 
	I personally have two three external hard drives. One is independently powered and connects via USB for downloading pictures. The two are portable drives (USB powered). I copy the picture folders every month to one of them, bring that to the office, then bring the other one home. Then do the same next month. Essentially, two are backups, one month apart. And one is always off site. Costco regularly has drives on sale.  | 
		
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 Do a preview then use the tools to draw marquees around the individual images and hit scan.  | 
		
 Ext Hard drives are cheap.  Even a USB 2 or 3 will fine.  Disconnect it when you are done backing everything up. This way, if you catch a virus and the Ext HD is not connected, you won't have corrupted data or it locked up on you.   
	Do NOT depend on cloud storage unless it is a secondary backup after the ext HD. I know folks who had their files erased and all they got was "so sad too bad, sorry". I keep a disconnected HD and a flash drive off premise for double security. The flash drive is updated regularly (flash is not a long term memory storage).  | 
		
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