If you are looking for more info on Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner – you have come to the right place
- Includes 35mm slide adapter and Adobe Photoshop Elements
- 1,600 x 3,200 dpi resolution, 48-bit color
- USB connection
- Four-button interface
- Fast 10 milliseconds/line scanning speed
Powerful, high-quality image and document scanning! This is precisely what’s delivered by the Epson Perfection 1650 Photo scanner. A fast, hassle-free and incredibly flexible scanning solution, this new scanner in the highly acclaimed Epson Perfection range has been designed specifically for the demanding user. Whether it’s scanning directly to the Web, documents for Optical Character Recognition (OCR), negatives or slides for color proofs, or direct to your Epson printer, the Perfection 1650 Photo has the technology and power that’s needed. The new one touch scan to web button, allows you to scan your photos directly to Epson’s Online Photo Album – Epson PhotoStation. You can enhance, personalize, store and share photos in your very own pe
Review by for Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner
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I haven’t had this scanner for very long, but I have already made more than 500 scans with it, and it’s is awesome. The preview scan is ridiculously quick: I can get a good idea of what my scan will look like in less than a couple of seconds. The software bundle is very nice for a beginner, wherein you can make automatic scans for email, web, file outputs with the push of the respective button on the scanner body. I tried the software out a few times and I was impressed with the results, but if you’re using Photoshop you don’t need to install the whole package. It only took a few minutes to set the thing up and do my first scan, which was pretty cool.Once you gain more confidence with the different elements in a scan (namely the relationship image size and resolution have with file size) you can use TWAIN for a more manual approach. This allows you to adjust your settings based on what your requirements for your final project are. For example, I could scan a postage stamp-sized picture at a high resolution and enlarge it into an 8″ x 10″ photo or larger and the quality would still look pretty good. Your final scan speed will depend on the resolution you’ve selected , but it’s still fast at higher resolutions. The lower the resolution, the faster the scan time.I love using TWAIN, especially since it only took a few trial runs to figure it out. It’s calculations for file size, resolution, and image size are all right there, so there’s no guess work needed from you. Epson also provides pretty good documentation for doing things manually for your first time (like a reference table for your final output on projects for web, negatives, photos, text, etc.). The color has been consistently sharp and the resolution very crisp, on both the flatbed and the transparency unit.Notice, however, that this is not a portable scanner. It’s bigger than some on the market and it is powered by an external power supply. But it is perhaps the best model on the market for projects that require excellent quality whether your project is personal or semi-profesional.
Review by skunktrain for Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner
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I haven’t printed anything out with the images I’ve scanned (yet) so I can’t comment on that. All I know is that I needed a decent slide scanner, for an inexpensive price. This one satisfies that need.I find that all scans are on the “warm” side – there’s a slight yellowish cast to the pictures. This is easy to get out quickly, using the bundled Photoshop Elements (or in my case, I used Photoshop 6). By the way, do you realize that Photoshop Elements is just thrown in with this scanner? And that it is a well-reviewed graphics software program that retails on its own for a respectable price? And that there is also a coupon (limited time offer – until 6/02) that allows you to buy the FULL version of Photoshop at a fantastic discount? (Half off, or thereabouts.) WHAT a deal! Something to think about if you want to get into Photoshop!Anyway, I found my slide scans to be of decent quality. Bear in mind, I am not exceedingly picky, because I have gone through several “consumer level” scanners with a slide attachment, and they all were pretty bad. So the fact that this one wasn’t awful like all the others delighted me. But to be brutally honest, the slide scans are not all that sharp at higher resolutions (I scanned at 720 PPI). And sometimes the color needs extra tweaking. But I have been able to fix up and size down (and sharpen) my slide scans just fine. They look great for web images (even large wallpaper-sized web pictures), and I am guessing, are fine for printing on an ink-jet printer. (However, I found that my some of my darker and more underexposed slide scans didn’t look that great, and required more Photoshop adjustments. But I need to expect limits to this scanner’s abilities, I guess.) All-in-all, slide scans are perfectly adequate, and I am sure, quite good considering that this is NOT a “professional” level slide scanner. My own guess is that you will be hard-pressed to find another scanner (at this price range) that will make better slide scans.Scanning negatives is pretty good (though, once again, a bit soft at higher resolutions). Some of my negative scans have been a bit “washed out”, and needed some extra Photoshop adjusting. Scanning prints is excellent. Almost all image scans needed the quick Photoshop tweak to take out a bit of yellow, though. But that doesn’t take much time, and I got used to it quickly. (EVERY image needs to be tweaked, after all, no matter how good the scanner is!)I am using an iMac running OS 9.2.1, and the scanner’s software is very stable. I don’t use any of the bundled software, just Epson’s TWAIN, in Photoshop. Works wonderfully. There is supposed to be an OS X update CD coming out in January 2002 (a coupon is with the scanner’s paperwork, so you can order the CD). If you are scanning more than one file at a time into Photoshop (scanning 4 negs at one time, or whatever) you need to give Photoshop plenty of RAM. (Always good advice anyway!)
Review by for Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner
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I purchased the 1650 Photo to scan my 30year old collection of color 35mm slides; and I could not be more pleased. I can’t believe the quality…you would never guess they were slides. The scanner does 4 slides at a time. I hooked it up and right out of the box to my Dell Computer/Windows 98 with no problems. The software is easy to use – no need to study the manual. I scanned a few 4×6 photos at first just to try it out and then switched to the slides. It also has a holder for black and white 35mm film strips. If the quality is as good as the color you could eliminate a B&W dark room and just scan the negatives and print from your computer. As I said, I have not spent much time looking at the instructions or doing other scanning, so I may not be as familiar with all the features as some. The one thing I don’t understand is why no `off/on’ switch. I would gladly paid a few dollars more for one. The bottom-line…it you want a reasonably priced scanner for 35mm slide the 1650 is what you want.
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(out of 38 reviews)
List Price: $ 199.99
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Review by for Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner
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This is not a bad scanner at all. The quality of the scans is good (although I have seen better). I had no problem setting the scanner up to my laptop running win2000. Like the other reviewers, some of the photo scans are crocked even when the images were lined up correctly. Also, the color of the scans tends to be on the magenta side. I easily corrected it with Photoshop. The ArcSoft software that came with the scanner is poor. Running the scanner via Photoshop Elements is ideal. No problems so far. I spent five hours the day that I got the scanner and scanned at least two dozen pictures and half a dozen slides.