What I saw were negative/slide converters that were either several hundred dollars or less than $100. I started searching online and came across a number of them on. The printers I looked into that could handle negatives and slides were waymore than I wanted to pay. Sadly, I believed that my all-in-one printer could do this and found out quickly that I was mistaken. It does so here goes.A year or so ago I finally got my negatives into archival sleeves and in binders (labeled by location of course!) and thought it was time to sit down and start scanning them. I gave her my quick 2 cents and promised a review when time allowed. I actually am reviewing this because my friend Jen of had talked about these types of scanners and wanting one.
That's not why I decided to do this post. What I can do is review something from an everyday user point of view.Now I've noticed that Dick Eastman has had a couple posts about negative/slide scanners recently. 'Thingie' and 'Whatchamacallit' are technical terms in my book. I'm not technologically sound.I'm not completely clueless either, but as for why things work the way they do.well, I'm not your girl. Now don't look for me to be writing many Tech Tuesday posts.