Quote:
Originally Posted by CW
...Just looking at the common issue of scans that don't accurately represent what a card looks like in hand....
...I think another part of the problem comes with the default settings these scanners provide. With my Canon CanoScan 5600F, the defaults setting has an "auto tone" feature which makes the colors deeper and the whites much brighter.
...If I turn the auto tone setting off, the cards scan appears much drabber than it looks in real life, almost washed out. I had to find a middle ground, a tone setting that shows what the card accurately looks like in hand. It took some trial and error. I'm not sure some sellers are knowledgeable enough to tweak the settings properly. The contrast and brightness settings on each person's monitor can also have an effect.
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Agreed. The technology is generic. It's a competion between manufacturers to get people who want their home photos to pop for family, not for card collectors. Not to say they shouldn't. For me to think that the more modern scanners are made just for me/us to show off our cards in their true nature is a pipedream, but please, Canon, "Pass the dutchie to the left hand side".