11-24-2012 01:37 PM
I am contemplating buying the canoscan 9000f, but I will need to be able to scan 110mm film format. Can I do this on the canoscan 9000f? I have seen an adapter for that film size on ebay and amazon (oddly enough, cannot find it on Canon), but the price is prohibitive. Can I scan negatives without any holder - in other words, just lay the film directly on the glass platen and scan the negatives in that way?
07-28-2017 02:07 PM
I absolutely agree with you, smaricic, that it would be great if Cannon sold a 110 negative holder. I saw that other people were able to make their own. After limited success, I bought an after-market 110 negative holder for a ridiculous price. That said, the photos I have recovered are, to me, priceless!
02-12-2015 08:35 PM
I'm an Epson user muddling around here because my wife is a Canon devotee. I don't know how the 9000f works but I can tell you that you don't want the transparencies to lie flat on the glass of the scanner. The results will not be satisfactory, never mind the details.
I made two different negative holders for my Epson flatbed that accepted 127 film and 116/616 film. These hold the negs above the glass and let me scan these odd-sized negatives. I'm sure similar holders can be made for any flatbed scanner.
Good luck.
05-16-2015 05:58 PM
Hi Frichardfolkert,
How high off the surface are the negatives held, using your homebuilt neg holders? I don't own the 9000F yet, but do you elevate the odd size negatives the same amount that they are held off the glass in the Canon 35mm holder?
Thanks..................Pete
05-27-2016 11:25 PM
You can use your intentionally crippled Canon scanner to scan other sizes of film, but you will need to make a mask. Caveat - the scan area at any one time cannot exceed the size of a 35mm scan, and you will need lots of patience and careful work. Use 90 pound or heavier paper and make sure each cut is done with a single stroke to minimize paper dust. Cut the outside dimensions of the mask to match the size of a 35mm slide. Then cut an opening in the middle of that piece of paper that is the size of the image you want to scan. Use the slide template in the scanner, and place one mask in each of the four slide holders. Carefully lay the film so that one of the images is over the hole in the template. You may do up to four of them at a time this way, but only 1 image from each strip of film. I don't recommend cutting the strips. Make sure you don't use anything to press the film flat as anyplace the film touches the glass or any glass "flattener" it will create an interference pattern throughout your scan. Tell Scangear that you are scanning slides. Scan away. (Side note: If we want to make sure that artificial intelligence (AI) never becomes powerful enough to take over the world, all we have to do is make it illegal for any company except Canon to do AI research. They have not gotten it right in all their years of writing scanner drivers, all they have ever achieved is a frustrating level of limitations on what you can do with your scanner. - But at least the scanner does a great job once you find ways past its limitations - and turn off all the artificial intelligence features.) [note: descending from soap box.)
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