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Microtek’s ScanMaker i800 Pro Design; A Fully Loaded Legal-Size Flat-Bed Film & Print Scanner
When the new Microtek ScanMaker i800 model was released I held back until the i800 Pro Design model was ready for review. The reason for waiting for the Pro Design model was that after reviewing numerous scanners over the years I have come to the realization that the software driver is as important, if not more so, than the hardware. Like an automobile, scanner specs resemble an auto engine’s specs—it’s what the makers use to sell you the car. But it is the entire chassis of a car that gets you from departure to destination, particularly if the road is full of twists and turns. Scanning photos is a windy mountain road with differences in each image due to film, processing, exposure, the subject, and the conditions under which the photo was made. While hardware is important, the software should be responsive and support your work. In this case, it’s the LaserSoft SilverFast Ai 6 software included in the Pro Design model that is an essential part of the package.
Microtek ScanMaker i800 Features
Scanning With The i800 Pro Design
In each of the essentials of good scan results, from optimizing the image gamut and removing any inherent color cast, to adjusting the tonal curve to bring out detail at all levels of density in the image, to correcting individual colors in hue, saturation, and brightness, the results were excellent. I scanned in 48-bit mode and did some final tweaking using a mild application of Photoshop’s Smart Sharpen as well as some dirt cleanup on Kodachromes using SilverFast’s SRD dirt and scratch removal. I was then quite eager to print the resulting scan files. I found that each 35mm color film frame scanned to 12x18” at 300dpi made as acceptable a print as I could expect from the original film image, with more than a few producing better proof prints than I anticipated.
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