Copying old 35 mm slides.
Thread Starter

Joined: Jan 2008
Aviation Qualifications: ATPL
Posts: 38
Likes: 62
From: The Smaller Antipode
My recommendation is if you've more than a couple of boxes of transparencies and can afford it, get them scanned to DVD professionally.
Guess you're right, might give them to the kids, at least they're earning now !
Just done the one so far - of my dog !!
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 7
Likes: 0
From: Australia
[QUOTE] Don't forget the old, classic ways of duping to create digital files. Loads of Ohnar zoom duplicators around for 25 quid or less on eBay.
EOS magazine article: Slide copying
Rob/QUOTE
They didn't mention the price Rob-
Looks like a great solution.
EOS magazine article: Slide copying
Rob/QUOTE
They didn't mention the price Rob-
Looks like a great solution.

Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,643
Likes: 44
From: South of the M4
ExSp33db1rd
Same as me. I have 1,150ft (c.75-mins) of Standard 8mm Kodachrome cine film taken between 1959 – 1963 showing my service with 99 Sqn (Britannias) and later (wedding, family footage etc.). I had these transferred to DVD professionally too, then used Corel's Pinnacle Studio to edit, adding music and sounds where necessary, and then burnt into meaningful videos that can be played on any home DVD player.
Plus 8mm cine




