🖼️ Digitize your past, display your legacy.
The KODAKKODAK SLIDE N SCAN is a versatile film and slide scanner featuring a large 5-inch LCD for instant preview and editing. It converts various film formats including 35mm, 110, and 126 negatives and slides into high-resolution 22MP JPEG images. Equipped with quick-feed technology and one-touch editing software, it streamlines the digitization process while supporting SD cards up to 32GB and USB Type-C connectivity, making it an elegant and efficient solution for preserving and sharing vintage memories.
Brand | KODAK |
Product Dimensions | 13.39 x 13.59 x 9.5 cm; 453.59 g |
Item model number | RODFS50 |
Manufacturer | Kodak |
Series | KODAK SLIDE N SCAN Film and Slide Scanner with Large 5” LCD Screen |
Colour | Black |
Standing screen display size | 5 Inches |
Wattage | 15 watts |
Power Source | USB |
Are Batteries Included | No |
Item Weight | 454 g |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
D**C
Improved slide scanning for me!
Very pleased with initial impressions of this device. Easy to use after 4-5 minutes familiarisation with the buttons (brightness and colour). Much faster scanning lots of slides than methods I've had in the past. Acceptable quality scans. The screen is big enough for you to see what you are doingThe manual says SDXC cards are not compatible, and there is a maximum of 32GB. However my SanDisk 64GB SDXC card is working perfectly well in it. I've got a lot of work to do - thousands of slides!
D**N
Good for casual use and backing up photos. Not good for high quality images.
The Kodak Digital Film Scanner is a great option for quickly scanning film and backing up old negatives. It’s incredibly easy to use, with a straightforward interface that makes the whole process fast and hassle-free. Setting it up is simple, and you can scan a lot of negatives in a short amount of time, which is great if you have boxes of old film to digitize.That said, while the scans are decent, they’re not quite as high quality as I would prefer. The resolution is fine for casual viewing and sharing, but if you’re looking for professional-grade detail, you might need a higher-end scanner. Still, for convenience, speed, and general film preservation, it does the job well!
M**M
Slide Scanner
I have to say that despite many negative reviews I found this scanner to be excellent and it did the job easily and without fuss. I connected it to my TV using the Included HDMI connector and viewed the slides on the TV screen. They were very easy to scan, one touch of a button to save and as good quality as the original slide permitted. You need to buy a 32GB SD card and I also bought a SD card reader for my MAC.I’d recommend this product as easy to use and good value for money.
T**R
Easy to use and great results
I bought this primarily for scanning slides, over a thousand of them. It's a lot easier to use than others I've had in the past, and does a good enough job with the ability to adjust color balance, brightness etc. Of course you have to remember that the final product will only be as good as the original slide. I also have loads of negatives and had originally planned to scan hard copies of those photos but when I tried a random negative scan I was truly blown away by the vibrancy and quality of both color and black and whites. I've now abandoned my initial plan and gradually working through even more negatives than slides and so far the results are uniformly excellent. And negatives take even less time than slides. No hesitation at all in giving this gadget a great score. I've had a few old pictures scanned professionally and can't now tell the difference - apart from the cost per picture that is!
W**K
You get what you pay for
I have many thousands of negatives and slides to scan and get them into the digital age. I had hoped that this Kodak scanner would be just right, but unfortunately the image quality is just not quite good enough. It is really simple to set up and use, and strips of negatives are scanned very quickly. Slides take a bit longer as you have to align the slide in the holder exactly. You can rattle through films very fast. However the price paid is that the resolution is not really good enough. Unfortunately there is no alternative but to use a dedicated professional film scanner which takes a lot of time but the image quality is far greater. The old saying that you get what you pay for is true, and this little Kodak scanner would be reasonable for the images produced if it was sold at under £100, but not the price it retails for.
G**R
Simple but effective
The slide scanner is quite simple to use. Slides are pushed into the scanner one at a time. Although it is a manual process, the scans are quick and I found a hundred slides could be scanned in around 30-45 minutes. The scanner can then be connected to a computer and the scans downloaded fairly quickly. The quality of the scans is adequate but not spectacular. Tips- don’t try to use an SD card larger than 32GB. Transfer the downloaded scans to a new folder in your computer and/or directly into your “photos”. It is quickest and easiest to delete all scans from the SD card before disconnecting from the computer. The SD card will then be ready for the next batch of scans
M**E
Does the job. Easy to use
Great little piece of kit, very easy to use and link to pc to transfer files across. Essentially takes a photo of the slide rather than scans it, you can alter brightness and hue on the scanner itself before you take the photo.Quality is ok, though as we are all used to super sharp images the quality will never be what we have now ai dont think.
M**E
Scanned my 35mm & 110 films with better results than the original prints
This relatively cheap, non-professional scanner did exactly what I wanted it to, which was scan my large collection of 35mm negatives and the few 110 negatives I had, with decent results. It produced better images than the original high-street/postal print services I used at the time, revealing more details, giving higher resolution, and better colour balance than many of the sets of prints. It also showed me how badly some of those services had cropped the prints. I managed to get some OK images off films with terrible development (like incredibly red or very dark negatives).You do need to keep cleaning the internal screen with the provided tool and I bought a cheap lens/negative cleaning kit to remove dust from the negatives and the internal screen of the scanner. Occasionally the automatic colour/brightness correction got it wrong but the scanner’s clear, bright screen showed this and the very simple adjustments available fixed the problem 95% of the time.It is a little clunky swapping between scanning a set of negatives and then saving them to the computer (I really do not see why it cannot do it directly) but all in all it did the job. I’m sure serious photography people would not be so happy with the unit, but I was always just a point-and-press photographer/ It digitised all my old 35mm negatives giving me final images better than almost all the original developed photos.One note, it won’t scan APS films - but then almost no scanner will. And the one I found that did, it created terrible scans!
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2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago