Scanners

Scanners

Re: Scanners Posted by Spartan on Sat Jul 30th 2005 at 3:59pm
Spartan
1204 posts
Posted 2005-07-30 3:59pm
Spartan
member
1204 posts 409 snarkmarks Registered: Apr 28th 2004
Does having a better scanner make a difference when scanning drawings?
Everytime I scan a sketch that I shaded the shading comes out looking
like crap. I always scan them at 300dpi. I even tried 600dpi. The
current scanner I'm using is a canon multipass f30. I just want to know
if buying a better scanner equals better scanned images?
Re: Scanners Posted by Underdog on Sat Jul 30th 2005 at 4:04pm
Underdog
1018 posts
Posted 2005-07-30 4:04pm
Underdog
member
1018 posts 102 snarkmarks Registered: Dec 12th 2004 Occupation: Sales-Construction Location: United States
Your scanner isn't near as important as the software it has. Some scanners have nasty software. I had an HP that was so-so, and a canon thats superb. You might try scanning to alternate formats, but I bet its your software.

Try using Paint Shop Pro to scan it with, and yes, most scanners work through PSP.
There is no history until something happens, then there is.
Re: Scanners Posted by DrGlass on Sat Jul 30th 2005 at 7:44pm
DrGlass
1825 posts
Posted 2005-07-30 7:44pm
DrGlass
member
1825 posts 632 snarkmarks Registered: Dec 12th 2004 Occupation: 2D/3D digital artist Location: USA
I'm about to go and buy a Epson 2580, i'll tell you how it works later
Re: Scanners Posted by im.thatoneguy on Sun Jul 31st 2005 at 6:20am
im.thatoneguy
84 posts
Posted 2005-07-31 6:20am
84 posts 18 snarkmarks Registered: Jul 15th 2005 Occupation: Student Location: USA
Are you scanning in grayscale or B&W? B&W produces very very bad scans.
Re: Scanners Posted by French Toast on Sun Jul 31st 2005 at 6:50am
French Toast
3043 posts
Posted 2005-07-31 6:50am
3043 posts 304 snarkmarks Registered: Jan 16th 2005 Occupation: Kicking Ass Location: Canada
I've got a scanner that's part of my printer. It's a CX3200, but I all of a sudden can't remember the company name....

Anyways, it's good. My brother uses it to scan his art all the time.
Re: Scanners Posted by Addicted to Morphine on Sun Jul 31st 2005 at 2:48pm
Posted 2005-07-31 2:48pm
3012 posts 529 snarkmarks Registered: Feb 15th 2005
Some scanners let you choose if you're scanning Text, Pictures, Mixed
Media etc... and sometimes you have to try out all the options to get
the best scan.
Re: Scanners Posted by DrGlass on Sun Jul 31st 2005 at 9:02pm
DrGlass
1825 posts
Posted 2005-07-31 9:02pm
DrGlass
member
1825 posts 632 snarkmarks Registered: Dec 12th 2004 Occupation: 2D/3D digital artist Location: USA
I always scan it as a picture and up the contrast in photoshop.
Re: Scanners Posted by Spartan on Sun Jul 31st 2005 at 11:34pm
Spartan
1204 posts
Posted 2005-07-31 11:34pm
Spartan
member
1204 posts 409 snarkmarks Registered: Apr 28th 2004
I always scan it as a picture and up the contrast in photoshop.
Same here. I'm scanning my stuff as photos at 300dpi.
Re: Scanners Posted by im.thatoneguy on Tue Aug 2nd 2005 at 5:24pm
im.thatoneguy
84 posts
Posted 2005-08-02 5:24pm
84 posts 18 snarkmarks Registered: Jul 15th 2005 Occupation: Student Location: USA
Unless your drawings are like 1in by 1 in you shouldn't have any trouble scanning at 300 dpi with any old scanner. Especially if you vectorize it in photoshop.

But to answer your question: yes a more expensive/better scanner will produce better images, but you don't need an better/more expensive scanner for what you're doing. If you were scanning slides and needed that extra 1200dpi with a constant color backlight, then spring for the ARGUS, but for scanning in drawings I've never found a scanner I didn't like.
Re: Scanners Posted by Junkyard God on Thu Aug 11th 2005 at 10:51pm
Junkyard God
654 posts
Posted 2005-08-11 10:51pm
654 posts 81 snarkmarks Registered: Oct 27th 2004 Occupation: Stoner/mucisian/level design Location: The Nether Regions
make a digital photo under a TL light that's bright so there's no shadows?
Hell, is an half-filled auditorium