How to Scan Images on the Black and White Apple OneScanner using Ofoto and Adobe PhotoShop Software

  1. Make sure that the OneScanner scanner is on. The power switch is along the left side of the scanner, towards the back.

  2. Place your image face-down on the glass scanner bed. For best results, place the upper left corner of the image in the corner of the glass marked with a red arrow.

  3. Select the "Ofoto" command from the Applications section of the menu that drops down under the Apple in the upper left corner of the display. The Ofoto software will load.

    On some occasions, Ofoto will display a box saying it could not detect a scanner. If this happens, turn the scanner off and then on again. The warning box should go away. Some times, however, this is not successful. If the "Prescan" and "Autoscan" buttons are "grayed out", that is unavailable, then Ofoto will not be able to scan since it is not communicating with the scanner. If this continues to happen even after you turn the scanner off and on repeatedly, quit Ofoto, turn off the scanner, restart the PC and then turn the scanner back on after the PC has finished starting up. Your next attempt to run Ofoto should be successful.

  4. The Ofoto software will engage the scanner and will place a "Scan Controls" box as well as an "Untitled" window on the screen.

  5. You can begin scanning right away by clicking on the "AutoScan" button. This button will automatically do a preview scan of the image and then Ofoto will determine what on the scanner bed to scan in-depth and what to ignore. This is how Ofoto avoids wasting system resources on empty areas of the scanning bed.

    Click on the "Prescan" button if you wish to only scan a small portion of what is on the scanning bed. This engages the scanner and starts a quick, low-resolution scan of the entire scanning bed. Once the low-resolution image is in the "Untitled" window, you can use the marquee tool to select exactly what portion of the scanner bed you wish to scan at a higher resolution. The selected area is everything that is included within the moving "marquee" box. Anything within this area will be scanned in-depth, at a higher resolution when you click on the "Scan" button. Narrowing down the size of this area is done by positioning the mouse cursor over a border of the moving marquee box until the mouse pointer turns into a two-headed arrow. Then, hold down the mouse button and move the mouse back and forth to adjust the size of the selected area. You may have to adjust all four sides in order to resize the scanning area.

    You can also move the selected area over parts of the preview image by positioning the mouse cursor within the selected area until the pointer turns to a four-headed arrow, holding down the mouse button and then moving the mouse so that the marquee box moves.

    You can also redefine the selected area by clicking the marquee tool, clicking the crosshair pointer outside of the selected area (to cancel it) and then defining a new area by dragging the pointer over the portion of the preview image while holding down the mouse button.

    By default, the scanner is set to scan in at a resolution of 72 dots per inch (dpi). If you wish to scan the image at a higher resolution, click the radio button next to "Manual" and then use the Scan DPI and Print DPI pop-up menus to set the higher scanning resolution. 72 dpi is the accepted resolution for any image that is being scanned for on-screen viewing, such as an image for a World Wide Web page. Placing a higher resolution scan on the Web will work. However, most browser programs will display a high-resolution scan at a larger size than most other images. So if you scan a 5-inch by 5-inch picture at 144 dpi, anyone viewing the image on Netscape or Microsoft Internet Explorer will see the image as a 10-inch by 10-inch graphic. Large, high-resolution images take a long time to load, are troublesome to edit and print and usually dominate a World Wide Web page. Keep these factors in mind before adjusting the Scan DPI and Print DPI settings.

    Other resolutions you may consider are 300 and 600 since these correspond to the print quality of many commercially available printers. Be wary, however, of scanning an image at higher resolution since the resulting image file could be so large that it is difficult to transfer and has a greater than average chance of crashing a graphics program or maxing out the memory on a printer.

    Once you are comfortable with the scan area and the resolution, you can click the "Scan" button. This is not necessary if you clicked the "AutoScan" button earlier.

  6. The scanner will then scan the portion of the scan bed that you selected or that was determined automatically by the "AutoScan" button.

  7. Once the scan is finished, Ofoto will place the scanned image into the "Untitled" window. At this stage you can use Ofoto's built-in image-editing functionality. However, you will probably want to take advantage of the image-editing capabilities of Adobe Photoshop. This is especially true if you wish to place your scanned image on a World Wide Web home page.

    To save a scanned image into a file, select the "Save" or "Save As" command under the File menu. The default format, PICT, is a common format and will allow you to open the image in Adobe Photoshop.

  8. Once you have saved the scanned image into a PICT file on the Patron Folder or a floppy disk, you can quit from the Ofoto application. In order to create a GIF file for a World Wide Web page, you have to start up the Adobe Photoshop application. You can start Photoshop by selecting the "Adobe Photoshop" command under the Applications section of the Apple menu.

    The Photoshop "Open" command under the File menu will allow you to open the file that you saved in PICT format. Once the file is open you can use the many tools and features of Photoshop to adjust the image to your liking or simply save it to a format that is different than PICT.

    If you need to create a GIF file, select the Photoshop "Save As" command under the File menu. Make sure that the image format (accessible via the "Format" pop-up menu in Photoshop's save dialog box) is set to "Compuserve GIF." If you need to save the image in another format, such as JPEG or Windows Bitmap (BMP), then switch the mode of the image, accessible via the Mode menu, from "Bitmap" to "Grayscale."

    Make sure that you use the correct file naming protocol for whatever files that you create. For example, a GIF file for World Wide Web consuption should be named filename.gif. You cannot have spaces in the name and the file has to have the ".gif" extension. The same goes for a file saved in JPEG format except that you have to use the ".jpg" extension. For a Windows Bitmap file, make sure to end the file name with a ".bmp" extension. You may also want to restrict any file name that will be used in Windows to the classic "eight dot three" standard (a file name with no spaces and a maximum of eight characters plus a three character extension). Although Microsoft claims that Windows 95 and Windows NT can handle long file names, at the system level all files are assigned eight-dot-three names. So it may make your file management easier to create these types of file names for any files destined for use on a Windows PC.