Has anyone experience with converting old Photo slides to digital images? I have found some 2.000 photo-slides from the period 1965-1975 in the attic, mostly photo's my dad took. Is a digital scanner the solution?
Here's my accumulated wisdom having copied several hundred if not thousands of slides - old and relatively new.
Three ways to do it digitally that have merit:
(1) Dedicated slide scanner - CoolScan 5000ED + SF210 slide feeder
(2) Dedicated flatbed scanner - Epson V750 or similar
(3) FX Digital SLR + Macro Bellows/Slide Holder (alternative is using the ES-1 slide copying attachment)
For scanning a lot of slides that need scratch and dust treatment (1) cannot be beat. These are going for a lot of $$ lately, but if you buy one used in great shape you will be able to sell it for little loss. I actually sold my CS5000ED and SF210 for a small profit after I put a few thousand slides through it. I had to clean the mirror (not for the faint of heart, but there are on-line directions) and futz with the SF210 to make it reliable (far more easy to do than most of the on-line suggestions because they usually have no idea what's causing the issue so they make elaborate modifications that are not needed). Downsides to this are fare and dynamic range not as good as (3).
Option (2) can be pretty good, but is time consuming to load in a set of slides to the flatbed holder. Dust and scratch removal not as good. Can't comment on sharpness or dynamic range compared to (1), but it's supposed to be pretty good.
Option (3) is excellent IF:
(1) You have relatively few slides that don't need much TLC (i.e., dust removal)
(2) You want the maximum dynamic range (my D800 beat out the CS5000ED in this area)
(3) You have high contrast slides that produce flare issues in the CS5000ED
Once you get this set up (I used a D800, PB-6/PS-6 bellows & slide holder, slide table as light source, 55/3.5 AIS macro), you can photograph a set of 36 slides in under 1/2 hour as taking the image is very fast (compared to minutes per slide for the CS5000ED). The non-collimated light source of (3) is more forgiving on dust and scratches with sharpness not really suffering.
So, I started out with (1) - i.e., the CS5000ED, which worked out well. Got through my slide collection AND my in-laws collection of really dirty/scratched Kodachromes/Ectachromes pretty well.
Kept (3) for any continued transparency shooting or if I wanted to go back and scan any certain slides with higher DR or less flare.
You don't need to use a D800 - there certainly is not 36MP of detail in the vast majority of slides - nor do you need to use FX (though it helps with the setup to image the whole slide area). I would think any of the lower MP current FX bodies or latest DX bodies will do. If you do use a DX body you will likely need an extension tube if you use a FX macro.
I'd just buy a CS5000ED and SF-210 slide attachment and re-sell it . . .
My 2 cents.