Hi, I am trying to get some details of a ring that belonged to my late
mom. The ring was given to my aunt and uncle as a " remembrance of my
mom" w/ the condition that once something happened to my aunt that the
ring comes back to the family. My aunt passed on and now I am trying
to get my moms wedding ring back to our family. My uncle is in frail
health and claims that he doesn't remember the ring, and my cousin is
being a jerk about the whole situaiton, saying that she wants a
picture of the wedding ring before she will release it to us.... go
figure.
I have attempted to scan the pictures using a hp office jet v40
scanner, fax, printer and used the microsoft digital image suite 9 for
the enlargement. I can get close before heavy graining distorts the
picture to a degree that won't allow for a good identification of the
ring.
will any of the professional photo labs out there have better success
in blowing up the ring on my moms hand? Is there any special photo
equipment that I should ask about when contacting photo labs that
should allow for the sharpest picture possible.
I am willing to pay a good price for the service, just so long as it
yields results. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Chris Neville.
Gregory Blank - 20 Aug 2004 01:26 GMT
Try a camera. You need a someone,...perhaps a local professional
with a close up lens to photograph the ring on hand or otherwise.
Then tell the photographer how big you want the print to be.
A photocopier is a poor way of doing what you attempt.
> Hi, I am trying to get some details of a ring that belonged to my late
> mom. The ring was given to my aunt and uncle as a " remembrance of my
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
>
> Chris Neville.

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