

I also recommend cleaning the negatives (I use Pec Pads and Pec-12) before mounting them in the tray. Getting them lined up perfectly is tedious and requires cutting the negative strips with sharp scissors, but essential for good results.

For this, I use the 35mm film negative tray and load 2 parallel strips each having 6 photos. The process should be similar with other scanners.įirst, load your media in the scanner.

Here, I describe how I use this feature with VueScan 9.7 and my Epson V600. While this feature is very useful, it took me a while to figure out how it works. I use this to scan 35mm film negatives, since my scanner can load 12 frames at a time. Multi-Crop is a feature that scans several things at once on the scanner deck and saves each as a separate file. But it can be hard to figure it out the first time. Once you know how to do something, it’s efficient. Continued from a few years ago … VueScan is a great scanning app but it has a UI that only an engineer could love.
