Specifications
Scanner type: Film scanner,Maximum optical scan resolution: 3,600x3,600dpi,Dimensions (HxWxD): 105x175x260mm, Weight: 1.59kg. Buy Now from Park Cameras
If you're older than 30, you've probably got boxes of old photos cluttering up your loft or garage. Apart from getting in the way, there's a chance your precious memories could be fading as they age - all the better, then, to find a neat way to digitise and archive them. Step forward Plustek's OpticFilm 135, a high-resolution scanner, dedicated to capturing 35mm film - but it can't scan photo prints.
The OpticFilm 135 is about the size of a middling loaf of bread, and not much more interesting to look at. On the top panel you’ll find plasticky silver switches for ejecting the film holder, performing certain predefined scans and turning the power on and off, while at the front and rear are flaps protecting the entry and exit points of the film holders. On the rear panel, the film exit is high enough above the power and USB ports that the holder shouldn't snag on the cables.
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There are two holders: one accepting up to six frames of 35mm film, and one for up to four mounted slides. For the most part, they're quality items: they're properly hinged, for a start, and are held shut by magnetic clasps rather than the nasty plastic clips you often get on this kind of device. Unfortunately, the film holder has no notches to engage with film's perforations, so positioning negatives correctly is a bit hit and miss - the more so because there are also no orientation markings.
Once loaded, the holder is motored into place ready for scanning. Unfortunately, this is where things start going downhill. The first thing you'll notice is that there's no TWAIN driver, so you can't scan directly into your photo editing software of choice. Plustek explained that aim was to provide 'an intuitive and simple solution', but to me this seems like a simplification too far.
^ Page Scan Plus has limited pre-scan options: there’s no preview, and you can’t change the JPEG file options
Instead, you have to use Plustek's own QuickScan Plus software, which is imperfect. It has no preview mode and no option to select just one or two frames: the entire film holder is scanned at your selected resolution even if only a single negative is loaded. This took 92 seconds at 1,200 dots per inch (dpi), and nearly four minutes at the maximum 3,600dpi resolution. This could quickly prove tedious if you're only trying to scan selected shots.
^ The entire film strip is scanned, even if you’re only interested in one frame
My other criticisms are you can't switch between negative and positive exposures once a scan has completed, and you can't enlarge thumbnails to get a better view: on a typical screen they're only two or three times the size of the original frame. More significantly, there's no noise or dust reduction available, and there are no options for the chosen output file format: for JPEGs, the bias seems to be toward small files rather than high quality. I wasn't overly impressed with the results, anyway: while the focus seemed good, detail wasn't very well preserved from the extreme lightest and darkest areas.
^ You can quickly fix the exposure and white balance of your scans
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