Dear forum members,
Is anyone familiar with a good scratch and dust removal software? I am impressed with what ICE can do but it is a hardware-software implementation and not available for my Kodak Professional Film Scanner.
Working with Photoshop will take me a long time since I am talking about hundreds of images.
Regards and Happy New Year,
Persio.
Scratch removal
-
ianders1
- SilverFast Professional

- Posts: 214
- Joined: Wed Jul 18, 2001 1:00 am
- Location: Jacksonville, FL
- Contact:
Persio,
I'm not sure if you know this, but the way that most of those scratch and dust removal techniques work is by using an infrared light to scan over the film, which picks up the dust and scratches, enabling the software to eliminate them. You have to have the hardware to match the software.
Silverfast is rumoured to be working on some sort of ROC/GEM technology of it's own, but it may be months away if it's even coming.
In the meantime, I'd suggest going a little more low-tech. I found this product called Film Guard while working as a movie theatre projectionist. It's a film cleaner, restorer, and preserver made for all formulations of commercial movie prints. It does a killer job at that, but I also tried some for film scanning at home.
It works by SAFELY cleaning off the dust, and since it's a liquid, it has the added bonus of filling in scratches when you scan. Of course you have to wet the prints before scanning them each time to get this benefit, but it works great. Theatres have trusted their $50,000-70,000 prints to this stuff for years, so let me assure you that it won't damage your film.
Also, you can try cleaning with compressed air, and there may be other film cleaning products available at your local photo shop, but I can vouch for this stuff, although it's fairly expensive.
http://www.film-tech.com/
Also, you can post your question here at another great forum:
http://www.dpreview.com/forums/
I'm not sure if you know this, but the way that most of those scratch and dust removal techniques work is by using an infrared light to scan over the film, which picks up the dust and scratches, enabling the software to eliminate them. You have to have the hardware to match the software.
Silverfast is rumoured to be working on some sort of ROC/GEM technology of it's own, but it may be months away if it's even coming.
In the meantime, I'd suggest going a little more low-tech. I found this product called Film Guard while working as a movie theatre projectionist. It's a film cleaner, restorer, and preserver made for all formulations of commercial movie prints. It does a killer job at that, but I also tried some for film scanning at home.
It works by SAFELY cleaning off the dust, and since it's a liquid, it has the added bonus of filling in scratches when you scan. Of course you have to wet the prints before scanning them each time to get this benefit, but it works great. Theatres have trusted their $50,000-70,000 prints to this stuff for years, so let me assure you that it won't damage your film.
Also, you can try cleaning with compressed air, and there may be other film cleaning products available at your local photo shop, but I can vouch for this stuff, although it's fairly expensive.
http://www.film-tech.com/
Also, you can post your question here at another great forum:
http://www.dpreview.com/forums/
- President_LSI
- LSI Staff

- Posts: 563
- Joined: Sun Jul 22, 2001 1:00 am
- Location: Kiel, Germany & Sarasota, Florida
- Contact:
-
Paul Escudier
- SilverFast User

- Posts: 28
- Joined: Tue Aug 21, 2001 1:00 am
- Location: UK
- Contact:
Dusta La Vista (good software awful name) sold with Dai Nippon (Screen) scanners, you may be able to buy it separately, although it's probably quite pricey. It basicaly reads through your scanned image marking possible imperfections, which you can then edit if neccessary, you then click ok and it's done! It's not perfect by any means, and as I said it's v.expensive but I scan about 200 trans to 30mb files a day and I would be lost without it. Think it might only be available for Mac though.
-
Caleb Clapp
- SilverFast User

- Posts: 30
- Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 8:26 pm
- Location: Boston
Return to “Imaging in general”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests
