On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 10:25:33AM +0100, Major A wrote:
> If it's only the mask, I think it should be rather easy to take into
> account: scan an unexposed part of the film, this gives you the mask
> only, then you know what you have to correct the other parts of the
> image with in order to get rid of the mask.
Because negative film can "correct" wrong exposure, it's not a trivial
task.
Here is a very crude way of removing the mask using Gimp:
http://www.freecolormanagement.com/color/gimp_negative_scanning.html
I did not yet add the screen shots, but for a seasoned Gimp user this
should not be a problem :-)
Karl Heinz
-- Karl Heinz Kremer khk@khk.net PGP Key at http://www.freecolormanagement.com/download/khk.asc EPSON Sane Backend: http://www.freecolormanagement.com
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