Glen Irvine
March 10th, 2002, 04:19 PM
Greetings on a snowy day in Whistler,
As I mentioned in a previous thread, I'm new to this world of digital
video and an having an absolute blast. Unlike many, of you, everything I
own seems to actually be working ( touch wood ). So here's a question
for many of you who have probably already done this.
I am working on a documentary which requires me to get some archival
photos from a school in Japan where I used to work. These are photos
from the 20's and 30's so obviously their quality is not great. A former
colleague still works at the school. The simplest thing would be for him
to scan the images and email them to me. Ultimately I will work them
in Photo Shop and then bring them into Final Cut Pro 2 to include in my
documentary
What resolution should I have my former colleague scan these old photos
at? Does anyone have any little tricks that can improve the final result.
Or should I get the images sent to me on a CD? Any help would be
greatly appreciated. Glen
As I mentioned in a previous thread, I'm new to this world of digital
video and an having an absolute blast. Unlike many, of you, everything I
own seems to actually be working ( touch wood ). So here's a question
for many of you who have probably already done this.
I am working on a documentary which requires me to get some archival
photos from a school in Japan where I used to work. These are photos
from the 20's and 30's so obviously their quality is not great. A former
colleague still works at the school. The simplest thing would be for him
to scan the images and email them to me. Ultimately I will work them
in Photo Shop and then bring them into Final Cut Pro 2 to include in my
documentary
What resolution should I have my former colleague scan these old photos
at? Does anyone have any little tricks that can improve the final result.
Or should I get the images sent to me on a CD? Any help would be
greatly appreciated. Glen