8 messages in edu.ku.nhm.mailman.taxacomdigital images of type specimens
FromSent OnAttachments
Bruce NeillAug 22, 1995 10:48 am 
Shawn Landry (BIO)Aug 22, 1995 10:53 am 
Doug YanegaAug 22, 1995 11:01 am 
Peter RauchAug 22, 1995 9:24 pm 
LINGAFELTER STEVEN WAYNEAug 22, 1995 10:22 pm 
Peter RauchAug 23, 1995 10:13 am 
Curtis ClarkAug 25, 1995 8:28 pm 
Shawn Landry (BIO)Aug 28, 1995 10:04 am 
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Subject:digital images of type specimensActions...
From:Peter Rauch (pet@VIOLET.BERKELEY.EDU)
Date:Aug 23, 1995 10:13:03 am
List:edu.ku.nhm.mailman.taxacom

Date: Tue, 22 Aug 1995 22:22:29 -0500 From: LINGAFELTER STEVEN WAYNE <lingafel at FALCON.CC.UKANS.EDU> Along a similar thread, I took a bunch of slides of types and was disappointed to find them all very dark. Some color and most structures are visible, but these aren't good enough to use to answer many questions about these taxa. Is there affordable software that is available to capture some of the hidden information? In other words can I refine the dark areas into a broader spectrum of colors via some digital manipulation?

You might be able to do that. It depends on _how_ dark the important detail areas are , and how much detail is actually contained in the photo slide (i.e, if you studied the slide with a strong backlight and a 12-15X handlens or dissecting scope, could you see important detail in those dark areas?). If the detail is there, then with some hardware (scanners; different brands/models have varying dynamic range characteristics just like film does) and software (image-editing programs), you might be able to capture some of that detail (at the cost of losing some of the detail that in is the lightest areas of the photo; but, you could scan a second time to optimize capture of the light-area detail, too).

I assume that you _really_ want to scan those dark slides because you have no practical opportunity to go back and re-photograph them?

The last question, how do you scan a slide? Do you need special hardware,

Yes (a scanner of some sort; as well as imaging software).

or can you just place it on a scanner?

Yes, also (I assume that you mean some kind of flatbed scanner; if it has a "transparency" option/feature). The issue is, an noted above, will the particular scanner have the characteristics you need to handle these particular dark images. Peter