Format, process, scan resolution, pick once per roll, repeat as needed.
A standard scan crops to the visible image area, the rectangle inside the negative's edges. A <strong>full-frame scan</strong> keeps the entire negative, which may include the rebate (the dark border), frame numbers, or sprocket holes depending on how the roll was shot and loaded.
<strong>When it's worth it:</strong> archival or showcase work, when you want the negative-edge aesthetic, or when you'd otherwise crop the file in post anyway.
<strong>Add-on price:</strong> +€1.50 per roll. Available on SP-3000 scans (Standard and Hires) only. Full frame is not offered as a separate option on DSLR scanning, it is included by default.
By default you get <strong>JPEG</strong>, high-quality, but compressed. Selecting <strong>TIFF</strong> means your files are delivered as uncompressed TIFFs only. <strong>No JPEG is included.</strong> More headroom for editing, no compression artefacts.
<strong>When it's worth it:</strong> if you'll dodge/burn, do colour grading, restore a faded shot, or print very large. If you're just sharing online or making small prints, JPEG is fine.
<strong>Add-on price:</strong> +€1.50 per roll. <strong>Hires SP-3000 scans only</strong>, Standard scans don't produce TIFF. DSLR includes TIFF by default.
Instead of running through the SP-3000 Frontier, each frame is captured on a <strong>100MP camera</strong> through a precision film holder. The result is a much larger, more detailed file, pulling more out of the negative than the Frontier can.
<strong>When it's worth it:</strong> large prints (A2+), archival captures of important work, heavy editing where you need every bit of detail, or showcasing a portfolio piece.
<strong>Price:</strong> €10 per roll · <strong>€2.50 per sheet</strong> for 4×5/5×7/8×10.
Pick what fits, we'll suggest a tier.