In today's digital age, 35mm film slides and the bulky projectors formerly used to view them are a thing of the past. Instead of boxing up your old slides and stuffing them in an attic to be forgotten ...
Q Could you recommend a device that can convert slide images to digital images? What should I be looking for as far as quality and what kind of prices would I be looking at? –J.B., Milwaukee A You ...
Save your images to an SD card for easy transfers. Digitizing means less clutter and a safer, longer-lasting way to keep old ...
If you have old folks sitting quietly at home, get them this and give them something to do. Slide scanning – along with vinyl record conversion – is one of those things that our elders would love to ...
Get the Kodak Slide N Scan Film and Slide Scanner, on sale now for $164.97 (reg. $189.99) through December 14.
Q. I am a regular reader of your column and have found it enlightening. However, I believe you may have misread the recent question you answered for reader Bill Reetz regarding burning 35 mm color ...
TL;DR: With its impressive 14MP image sensor, film adapters, LCD display, easy-load film inserts, and compatibility with multiple devices, the Kodak Slide N Scan Film & Slide Scanner is an excellent ...
The Kodak P461 Personal Photo Scanner ($139.99 direct) is both literally and metaphorically an extended version of the Kodak P460 Personal Photo Scanner ($109.99 direct, 3.5 stars) that I recently ...
Turn dusty photographic relics into vibrant digital images you can look at (and share) anywhere. Photo: Cult of Mac Deals Don’t let your analog memories fade into the past. Instead of piling up photo ...
The following content is brought to you by Mashable partners. If you buy a product featured here, we may earn an affiliate commission or other compensation. Take a trip down memory lane digitally with ...
From the days of poodle skirts until tie-dyed T-shirts were the rage, the shutterbugs of my family favored slides over photographs to capture weddings, vacations, reunions and even my dad's Army tour ...
Today the digital camera is ubiquitous, but photos used to be taken by momentarily exposing something called “film” to light. Yes, film–the ode to photo-sensitive chemical reactions that produced all ...