Imaging Lab: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
|||
(9 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Herbarium Digital Imaging Center currently contains 9 specimen imaging workstations. Two are equipped with external LED panels at open copy stands (i.e. no lightbox) and seven utilize a tabletop <span style="line-height: 18.9091px;">MK Photo-eBox</span> [http://mkdigitaldirect.com/products/lighting-systems/mk-photo-ebox.html [1]] with continuous illumination. Any imaging station may be used for any Herbarium digitization project. | |||
The Herbarium Digital Imaging Center currently contains | |||
*The Photo-eBox is the preferred choice for photographing standard-sized herbarium specimen sheets. | *The Photo-eBox is the preferred choice for photographing standard-sized herbarium specimen sheets. | ||
Line 9: | Line 7: | ||
:<br/> | :<br/> | ||
= Imaging Lab How To's = | |||
[[How to reserve a camera station|How to reserve an imaging station]] | |||
[[How to use a Nikon camera imaging station|How to use a Nikon camera imaging station]] | |||
[[ | [[Specimen Digitization Manual for Volunteers|How to digitize specimens: a manual for volunteers]] |
Latest revision as of 14:18, 10 June 2024
The Herbarium Digital Imaging Center currently contains 9 specimen imaging workstations. Two are equipped with external LED panels at open copy stands (i.e. no lightbox) and seven utilize a tabletop MK Photo-eBox [1] with continuous illumination. Any imaging station may be used for any Herbarium digitization project.
- The Photo-eBox is the preferred choice for photographing standard-sized herbarium specimen sheets.
- The open copystand setup at a flash lighting station is recommended for bulky or oversized specimens, bound exsiccatae, and other materials not easily photographed inside the Photo-eBox.
Imaging Lab How To's
How to reserve an imaging station