Thursday, September 3, 2020

Kodak Scanza Review

Early this year, I ordered a Kodak Scanza, a self-contained device which digitises negatives and slides. It claims to scan 135, 126, and 110 negatives and slides, and 8 mm and Super 8 mm film (one frame at a time) -- though not disk film, 120, 127, or 4 x 5 negatives or slides. It will not do Agfa slides, although one can snap apart a Scanza tray to make it work. The Scanza has video output and connectivity. Its auto-exposure is very good, and there are further exposure and colour adjustments. Scanning negatives and film (as opposed to slides) can be awkward, due to snagging. The quality of digitised photos is good, though not perfect. The results with 8 mm film are sub-standard. And the screen has a too-low resolution. The Phoblograopher sums it up nicely: "It isn’t really all that awful." OBSERVATION: It could have been better. It had mediocre engineers I think. The image shows Kodak Super 8 film.

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