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Get your scanner to work with Photoshop CS6

#1 User is offline   Macworld 

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Posted 08 October 2012 - 05:00 AM

Post your comments for Get your scanner to work with Photoshop CS6 here
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#2 User is offline   scannergirl6006 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 05:29 AM

What about KODAK PHOTO CD. I used to be able to bring those pictures into Photoshop via TWAIN ( I believe) which recognized the proprietary manner in which KODAK digitized film pictures and burned to their GOLD PHOTO CD.
Please note this is PHOTO CD, not the dumbed down PICTURE CD that Kodak came out with later.

I have several PHOTO CD's and Unless I am missing something, my Photoshop CS5 does not see the data. I want to be able to "Read" that data at the very high resolutions that Kodak's PHOTO CD offered, and not just a dumbed down jpg thumbnail.

Please help!
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#3 User is offline   jaynelson 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 07:52 AM

Scannergirl6006: PhotoCD was a terrific solution at a time when storage space was expensive and difficult to manage. Now, however, I think we can safely consider it a "legacy" file format. I would suggest that you convert all your Photo CD images to a standard such as TIFF. I did a Google search for "Photo CD to TIFF" and came up with several conversion options, such as the $79 pcdMagic and a free Windows utility "Easy2Convert PCD to TIFF". The $40 GraphicConverter also opens and converts Photo CD files. I don't know anything about the first two, but GraphicConverter has been a workhorse utility for many many years.
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#4 User is offline   Dennistrator 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 01:25 PM

What a TWAIN wreck.
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#5 User is offline   FrankCDN 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 02:05 PM

For those with a Mac that can run Snow Leopard, dedicate a partition if you have enough disk space instead of a whole computer. With my Mac Pro, I have a small 160 GB drive with 10.6.8 installed and use it solely to scan.
Shame on scanner makers for making perfectly good scanner obsolete with a simple outdated driver.
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#6 User is offline   whitedog 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 03:05 PM

Thanks for the rundown on scanning with Photoshop CS6. It cleared up several issues for me.

Besides the move to ImageKit drivers, on the Mac, Photoshop CS6 no longer populates the Plug-Ins folder with its default plug-ins. These are now included within the body of the app itself. The folder now provides a home for third-party (and extra Photoshop) plugins. Further complicating the issue is the fact that, on the Mac at least, other application functions, particularly user settings, have been moved to the ~/Library/Applications Support/Adobe/Adobe Photoshop CS6 folder. Other functions are managed in the Library/Applications Support/Adobe folder, including the Camera Raw plugin. Fortunately, we no longer have to update Camera Raw manually.
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#7 User is offline   TimmySlapstick 

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  Posted 08 October 2012 - 07:28 PM

Is that really the packaging for Photoshop CS6? I have not seen it before. Wow, that really sucks.
I really miss whoever was doing Adobe's design for the CS2 suite. The packaging was colorful and well designed. The app icons were beautiful. The tabs in the interfaces were even better looking.
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#8 User is offline   scannergirl6006 

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  Posted 09 October 2012 - 12:34 PM

Quote

Scannergirl6006: PhotoCD was a terrific solution at a time when storage space was expensive and difficult to manage. Now, however, I think we can safely consider it a "legacy" file format. I would suggest that you convert all your Photo CD images to a standard such as TIFF. I did a Google search for "Photo CD to TIFF" and came up with several conversion options, such as the $79 pcdMagic and a free Windows utility "Easy2Convert PCD to TIFF". The $40 GraphicConverter also opens and converts Photo CD files. I don't know anything about the first two, but GraphicConverter has been a workhorse utility for many many years.

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#9 User is offline   scannergirl6006 

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  Posted 09 October 2012 - 12:35 PM

Thank you for the reply. I will look into these options.
Do you know if the photo CD to tiff will allow me the highest resolutions, something that PHOTO CD allowed.
Also will the software work with windows 7 . I have a laptop with windows 7, and an iMac (one year old)
Again, thank you thank you very much
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#10 User is offline   Stewsburntmonkey 

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Posted 09 October 2012 - 01:36 PM

 scannergirl6006, on 09 October 2012 - 12:35 PM, said:

Thank you for the reply. I will look into these options.
Do you know if the photo CD to tiff will allow me the highest resolutions, something that PHOTO CD allowed.
Also will the software work with windows 7 . I have a laptop with windows 7, and an iMac (one year old)
Again, thank you thank you very much


The TIFF should be lossless, meaning it will keep whatever resolution and fidelity that the original Photo CD image had.
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#11 User is offline   fredlave 

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  Posted 12 October 2012 - 09:09 AM

VueScan is the way to go. Not only is it inexpensive (compared to Silverfast for instance) but the user can d'load it and try it before purchase. It supports a huge number of scanners, including negative scanners.
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#12 User is offline   MacworldMember 

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  Posted 31 October 2012 - 03:01 PM

Photoshop CS6 is very robust and it rocks! Another way to scan Photoshop CS6 is with Markzware FlightCheck. Thanks for all the tips for scanning Photoshop CS6, Jay.
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