







🎞 Digitize nostalgia like a pro — your memories deserve the spotlight!
The QPIX Film Negative Scanner delivers professional-grade 22MP digital scans of 35mm, 110, 126KPK, and Super 8 film negatives and slides. Featuring a vibrant 2.4-inch LCD for instant preview, it operates standalone without a computer by saving images directly to SD cards (up to 32GB). Portable and easy to use, it includes all necessary cables and a cleaning brush, making it the perfect tool for millennials eager to preserve and share their analog memories in stunning digital quality.











| ASIN | B07P45NHWK |
| Best Sellers Rank | #215,310 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #96 in Slide & Negative Scanners |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (580) |
| Date First Available | February 19, 2019 |
| Item Weight | 9.6 ounces |
| Item model number | 610 |
| Manufacturer | QPIX DIGITAL |
| Product Dimensions | 3.58 x 4 x 4.13 inches |
C**.
Restore the Memories
If you're older than 30, you probably know what I'm talking about... You have a box that's just filled with photos that you, or your parents, took when you were younger. You know, before everything went digital. Sometimes the photos survived, but most of the time they were in an album that sat out too long and started to fade. How do you recover those memories? I recently found a box full of pristine negatives from a trip I took to Russia when I was in high school. I didn't have many of the original photos, but the negatives were in great shape. That's where this product comes into play. One afternoon and a trip down memory lane later, and I have a nice digital collection of pictures from my trip, some I hadn't seen or thought about for years. Nostalga alone is worth the price! Now for the technical details. The scanner was well packaged and comes with everything you need to get going, except a memory card. It takes standard SD cards, which I had tons lying around, so that wasn't an issue. It comes with a USB cable and can be powered via a computer or by using the included power plug. It has gloves to protect your negatives and various adapters to fit slides, 35mm and other film sizes. I used this with 35mm film. Loading the film was easy and you have some basic options to improve the quality of the scan and the color. I think I'd likely use a photo editor on my computer to enhance some, but it's nice to be able to brighten up some of the darker pictures. Scanning is a breeze and then you can just connect the USB to your computer and download the files. In my images, you can see a picture I took from the Red Square and the final image is the scan uploaded from my computer. It looks great for a 30 year old negative! I highly recommend this scanner if you have a bunch of negatives lying around that you'd like to share digitally. It works great, is easy to use and really brings out a lot of fantastic memories.
Y**X
Easy way to digitize old, PRICELESS memories. Does not require a computer
How many of you still have 35mm films around? My parents do! How about 4"x6" and 5"x7" prints? Of course, we do! Digitizing them took a VERY long time: I'd have to take the prints, tape them to 8"x10" sheets, scan them at work, send the resulting PDF home, and edit/crop them out with Photoshop. Scanning films was impossible as I did not have equipment for it, and I started looking for a digitizer that could scan both films and prints. Bought this Qpix one on sale for $110. PROS - Scans multiple film negatives - Scans slides, business cards, and 3x5, 4x6, and 5x7 prints - Easy to use - Fairly fast scans - Can scan a whole roll of film at once - Saves to SD cards - Built in LCD screen to preview the scans before saving - Saves as JPEG files so you can share - 14 MP image sensor produces quite good scans - Does not require a computer (so, images are saved to SD card and can be read by Mac, Windows, Linux, etc) CONS - Pricey, though comparable to a similar Kodak scanner (but the Kodak cannot scan prints) - Manual has grammatical errors, but was easy enough to follow - Can only scan one print at a time, but can process a whole roll of a film Overall, despite the high price for these types of devices, it accomplishes what I needed -- and does it very well. Being able to save precious memories is PRICELESS.
R**S
More that I expected
I had hundreds of old 35 mm slides that are 50 years or more old. These two were taken in Feb 1968 at Houston Zoo. the slides were my dads, and these had been through a house fire, and I have stored them for years wondering what to do with them. I even stored them in my garage in Arizona in a carboard box for the last 16 years()Temps of 100 plus degree)s. I had little hope for the quality to be any good , but I purchased this machine because of some good reviews and just to see if I could covert these to digital. The original slides where taken with early 35 mm cameras and even a kodak stereo camera. So the quality is not nearly what you would get with todays cameras or even cell phone pics. The scanner does provide for some color adjustments, but these are copied just as they were taken. I also found it easier not to open the plastic tray but to but the tray out of the scanner and slip slides in and out without opening the tray. Opening the tray was a hassle. But by sliding out the slide and sliding another slide into the end slot it was a quick operation. Even the stereo slides which are a little smaller than a standard 35 mm slide worked great with one end of the slide sticking out but since is was basically a duplicate of the other slide that worked even better for reloading. I have not tried film or other size slides. I do have some old 2x2 slides but haven't figured out how to copy them. If you have old slides that you thought you would never be able to view again, go for it. It's worth the price to see these old pics of my parents I thought were forever lost.
A**A
AWFUL QUALITY PICTURES
This gizmo is totally unable to yield ANYTHING close to a good image from 8mm or Super 8 film. Pictured here is what was a good image on the original film itself -- and this is the result of scanning it with this QPIX product. We spent several hours on it (the instructions are awful) and this was the best I could get. Don't waste your money or your time on this this cheap gadget.
B**R
Good item for an amateur
Going through old negatives is what this is about. And the quality of the pictures are as good as the negative can give. Remember the 110 cartridge films? While the picture is blurry, with a good photo editing you can clean it up, but never as good as the 35mm. The better negatives give a very good digital picture. I do wish it would take bigger negatives. I have some 2x3 and 4x6 B&W negatives from my parents. While the 2x3 will go into it, the area scanned is only the size of a 35mm.
N**X
After a quick read of the instructions I was off to the races transferring slides and negatives to an SD card. It works well and is very straightforward to use.
B**E
In concept the unit is good but in practice it delivers poorly. Slide delivery mechanism is bad, slides jam and it is not simple to use. It seems to have a very flaky software system because the display often shows up a triangle error. The quality of conversion is not great either but I suppose the lens quality in a cheap machine reflects in the output images. Not something I would recommend.
A**R
The image may be decent. But the colour is definitely off. You get to adjust either the red, blue, green, or yellow filters for the image you scan. But you have to do it manually, and it is impossible to get the original colours of the image, or even a believable colour. Don't buy the product. Invest in something more professional with a higher cost. Saves time and effort.
M**E
Windows10 and 11 on two different PCs did not recognise/find unit, including using 'new hardware' scanning. I did not find any reference to Windows versions in paperwork. Suspect unit is OLD tech. Unable to find drivers 'anywhere'. Software provided on CD is an app only and no help. Hard copy manual "trouble shoot" no value ... even mentions port on back of unit that does not exist.. suspect copy paste error not edited to update to match unit or model. Does scan to a memory card; quality 'fair'. Need separate card reader to move pics to PC/drives. Method of handling hard copy photo is 'cluncky', plus big risk photo can fall inside unit (good luck after that). Unit flashy on outside but is a very limited device'. USB 2.0.
J**E
Since my first order of this item had a piece jiggling around inside of it and had a shadow on the left side of the screen that would also appear on the saved digital copy, I tried ordering another one. The second one didn't have any jiggling pieces but the screen would show bright light coming in from the bottom corners on both sides and this too appeared on the saved digital copy. I sent this one back also. Otherwise, if the screen showed the picture without the shades and extra shiny corners, this product would be great. It is easy to use.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago