

Even if you've never scanned film before, you can expect to be up and running in around 10 minutes. The biggest thing the Scanza has going for it is ease-of-use. One of the plastic film holders with 35mm slide. This is not for scanning a whole reel of 8mm film, this is specifically for scanning individual frames of 8mm or Super 8 slides. The 8mm/Super 8 option is misleading, though. There's no option for medium format, though you can scan 35mm, 110, and 126 formats as well as 8mm/Super 8. In terms of film format flexibility, the Scanza is. Pretty much everything is plastic and feels a little cheap in its construction quality. Opening the box you're greeted with HDMI, USB and video out cables, an AC adapter, user manual, the scanner itself (in bubble wrap below), a toothbrush shaped surface cleaner and a handful of plastic film holders.


Works with: 35mm, 126, 110, Super 8 and 8mm formats.It wears the Kodak logo, but has no affiliation with Kodak Alaris, the company bringing back Kodak T-Max P3200 and Ektachrome. The Kodak Scanza is a simple, non-professional film scanner.
