1-4 of 4 Answers
No, you have to scan one slide at a time. You can't scan a solid photo with this device, it is not the same as a printer.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not on this unit. This is for 35mm and strip film only. The film is slid through the unit to digitize. For albums with multi photos, I use a Epson V19 flatbed scanner where the lid pops off. Then you can scan page by page. Once each page is scanned you can crop out each picture and select SAVE AS and hit Enter (and the cropped photo is saved seperate from the original photo). NOTE: do not crop and then SAVE, this will overwrite your original.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Unfortunately, it has to be 1 photo at a time. I bought this to transfer old photos, slides and film negatives. Works as expected.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.No you can not scan one page at a time on the Kodak Scanza. You need the negatives. If the photos are in albums, you should have a 4 in 1 printer. You would scan the photos to a computer or a jump drive. Then you can have them put on a DVD for preservation. Makes a wonderful family gift. I do this often. I have a HP Officejet Pro 8720 (there are other 4 in 1 printer brands available that will do the same job) Normally this is what I do; (1) scan the photo to a Jump Drive (2) put the jump drive in my computer to transfer to computer for editing (3) then you can burn to a CD or DVD. I (4) Transfer my edited photos (that is to say cropped, light adjusted, rotate or what ever in required to have a good photo) put back on a jump drive and take to my local professional video guy that makes the DVD's. I also include music and some type of Identification of the people in the photos. When he makes the DVD I ask for a 10 second time for each photo, so the viewer has plenty of time to see the picture and any notes that I have added. Note: You can add a sticky note to the photo with the dates, event and/or names of persons on the photo, before scanning, if desired. This preserves the historical value of the pictures for future generations.
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