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Scanning
Images with the Apple Color OneScanner
Related
Help
Desk Files
GGCS
Computer Lab Printing
Policies
Choosing
a Printer on a Macintosh
General
Procedure
You
must be using the Macintosh computer that is connected to
the Apple Color OneScanner. Open the application Adobe
Photoshop by selecting it from the Microsoft Office Menu
in the upper right corner of the screen.
Once Photoshop is open, click on the File
menu, point to the Import
submenu and select Apple
Color
OneScanner.
This opens a window containing the controls for the scanner
and a preview window for your scanned image.

Figure 1: The Apple Color OneScanner window. This window
contains the controls for the flatbed scanner and imports
scanned images into Adobe Photoshop.
A number of options are available within the scanning
window. You will have to decide which options are
appropriate to your scanning project. An important
consideration is the resolution of your image (see GGCS Help
Desk File: Scanning Resolution). If necessary you can change
the options available:
- Source -
Flatbed
- Image -
1) Color: what you will commonly use, 2) Grayscale, 3)
Halftone: often good for line drawings, 4) Black and
White
- Destination
- Sets the resolution for specific output devices. It is
better to set the resolution and then modify your image
dimensions and resolution in Photoshop.
- Resolution
- Enter an image resolution (supersedes Destination
settings)
- Automatically
Suggest Crop - Software will give a suggested selection
around your image. You can then adjust this afterward to
select the desired portion of your image or eliminate any
white borders.
- Automatically
Adjust Tone - The scanner will adjust the tone to what it
thinks it best. You can also adjust the tone
manually.
- Automatically
Straighten - Since it is hard to get you image perfectly
straight, someone decided the computer should be able to
do it for you based on linear features that it thinks
should be horizontal or vertical. It's great when it
works, but a real pain when it doesn't.
When you
have selected the appropriate options, click the
Preview
button. This will make a preliminary scan of the entire
scanning surface to search for your image. Often it is
useful to hit Preview with the default settings before
making any changes. You can then select the portion of the
image that you want by dragging a box around it (remember
that a white border around your image will use up a lot of
disk space). If you hit Preview again, it will scan only
your selected region of the scanning bed. You can now adjust
the Tone and/or Threshold if desired.
Once you have finalized the scanner settings, click the Scan
button to generate your final image to be loaded into
Photoshop. Once the final scan is finished your image will
be dumped to a Photoshop window where you can use the
Photoshop tools to polish and save your image to a file.
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