The Denver Post

How to free childhood memories trapped in ancient film

- By J.D. Biersdorfe­r

Photograph­y began to go digital about 30 years ago, so if you are older than that your relatives probably documented a portion of your childhood on film-based formats, like slides or prints made from negatives. Or maybe you have stacks of your old slides and negatives from longlost pictures boxed up in the attic or garage.

While not quite as simple as scanning old photo prints, digitizing that film rescues family history from outdated media and makes it easy to share the restored memories.

Here are a few ways to get the job done.

The smartphone method

As with prints, you can “scan” a slide or negative with your smartphone by taking a picture of it or using one of the many slide/film-scanning apps. For best results, make sure the original is free of dust, and evenly illuminate the transparen­cy from behind. An inexpensiv­e scanning kit — which provides the backlight as well as a place to rest your phone for a more stable shot — is an option.

Kodak’s Mobile Film Scanner kit ($40 or less) is one option. It works with the free Kodak Mobile Scanner app for Android or IOS. Just put a slide or negative on the battery-powered LED backlight, then focus the phone’s camera on it from above and * snap a photo. Depending on your phone and its camera(s), however, you may have to experiment with the distance and focus to capture crisp images.

Rybozen makes a similar smartphone film scanner. You can also make your own slide scanner out of common materials to capture images with your smartphone or stand-alone camera with a macro lens for closeup focus. Youtube hosts several videos on the topic — just search for “DIY film scanner” or similar wording to find several guides from do-it-yourself enthusiast­s.

Photomyne’s Slidescan inventive app ($40 for two years; a free trial is available) is another option. You hold the slide in

front of a laptop displaying a plain white webpage and take a photo of it. The software automatica­lly enhances and crops the resulting image, or you can make manual adjustment­s. Photomyne’s separate Filmbox app does the same for negatives. FilmLab ($6 a month) is another smartphone scanning app that has Windows and Mac versions.

Smartphone scanning has some downsides.

You don’t get the highest-quality results, and it can be tedious if you have many images. But it is relatively inexpensiv­e.

The scanner method

Smartphone­s can be all-purpose devices, but using hardware designed for a specific task often brings better results. If you have boxes of transparen­cies to convert, investing in a compact film scanner (like those from Wolverine or Kodak) can simplify and speed up the process for around $150. Plustek makes higher-end models.

A flatbed scanner that can handle film along with prints and documents is another option, like the Epson Perfection V600 (around $250 online).

If you already have a flatbed scanner for documents and photos, check your model’s manual to see if it can handle slides and film negatives, as some include that ability. If your scanner is not equipped to handle transparen­cies, you can make your own adapter out of silver cardboard to diffuse the scanner’s light and illuminate the image. Make: magazine has a free template and instructio­ns online, as do other DIY sites.

And be sure to scan the images at a high enough resolution for them to look good at an enlarged size and for printing; 3,200 pixels per inch is common.

The profession­al method

If you don’t have the time, patience or equipment, sending photos out to a media-conversion company like Memories Renewed, Scanmyphot­os or Digmypics is another option. Most shops charge by the slide — prices can start around 21 cents each.

For your money, you get high-quality images. Some companies let you preview the results and even skip a certain number of dud shots in your collection. Your originals are returned after the scanning is done and your digital copies are ready.

Get ’gram-worthy

Slides and negatives can fade over time, especially if they were stored improperly. Many filmscanni­ng smartphone apps also include basic editing tools to adjust color and cropping.

And you can always use Apple’s Photos and Google Photos for mobile and desktop for fast, free photo-editing to get those pictures ready to share.

Share and save space

All the time, effort and (possibly) money that you put into digitizing the old film bring another benefit besides easyto-share photo files.

You can store them in a secure place online as a backup — and as the new archive if you decide to part with the originals during spring cleaning.

 ?? J.D. Biersdorfe­r, © The New York Times Co. ?? A film slide in New York in April. If you have decades of family history stored on old slides and negatives, you can easily convert those pictures to digital photos.
J.D. Biersdorfe­r, © The New York Times Co. A film slide in New York in April. If you have decades of family history stored on old slides and negatives, you can easily convert those pictures to digital photos.

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