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Creating perfect photos from your slide and negative scans with ColorPerfect: Creating linear scans

Suitable scans are the key to producing color integrity with ColorPerfect. The following tutorials will show you how to scan using different hard- and software. We have created these tutorials to aid you in getting started with processing your slide scans in ColorPerfect's ColorPos mode and your negative scans in ColorPerfect's ColorNeg mode.

What do I have to look out for when scanning slides and negatives for processing with ColorPerfect?

To harness the full potential of our Photoshop plug-ins it is important to create imagery that is as untouched as possible (RAW Data). This might require some involvement at first but will soon become easy. It is of the utmost importance that you do heed the following guidelines. The image file resulting from a scan must be in RGB mode, must have a color depth of 16 bit per channel (48 bit RGB) and should ideally be linear. The term linear refers to the image's gamma encoding. A linear image has a gamma value of 1.0 which means no adjustment has been applied to the data. Scans of this nature are comparable to a digital camera's RAW files. They contain the unaltered equivalent to the intensities of light read in by a scanner's CCD.

Our previous plug-in ColorNeg could exclusively work with images like that. To process slide and negative scans in ColorPerfect's ColorPos and ColorNeg modes linear input is still recommended. In ColorPos mode gamma encoded input is generally acceptable, too. The new ColorNeg mode now also features settings that allow processing gamma encoded negative scans. This is important to some users because it is impossible to create linear scans with certain scanner software.