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ClearClick Virtuoso 3.0 (Third Generation) 22MP Film & Slide Scanner (35mm, 110, 126) with Large 7' LCD Screen - Convert Slides and Negatives to Digital Photos

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$169.95

$ 70 .99 $70.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Quickly & Easily Scan Your Old Film, Slides, & Negatives to Digital Photos at 14 MegaPixels or 22 MegaPixels Interpolated (Scanning Quality: ~ 3824 x 2512 Pixels)
  • Extra Large 7" Preview Screen - See Your Photos in "Real Time" As You Scan - Scans onto SD Card (NOT INCLUDED; 32GB OR LESS)
  • Works with 35mm, 110, & 126 Negatives and 50mm Slides - No Computer or Drivers Required
  • Mini HDMI Output - Output To TV As You Scan or View Scanned Photos After You Scan (Mini HDMI Cable Not Included)
  • 2-Year Warranty From ClearClick (Extendable To 3 Years With Product Registration) & Free Tech Support from ClearClick, a USA-Based Small Business



Product Description

Introducing the Virtuoso 3.0 Slide and Negative Scanner 22 Megapixels interpolated
Scan slides and negatives to digital photos. Scans at 14 megapixels or 22 megapixels interpolated.
Get started in just minutes - saves in JPG format onto SD card (not included)
Easy loading of film and super fast scanning.
Extra large 7" preview screen and TV connectivity.

Got a box of old slides and negatives? Turn your photos into digital format so that you can preserve them and share them with others!

It's easy with the ClearClick Virtuoso 3.0 (Third Generation) Slide & Negative Scanner.

No computer is required to use the scanner, which means no confusing software or drivers. The Virtuoso 3.0 can scan your film to digital photos at a high-quality resolution of 14 megapixels or 22 megapixels (interpolated). (Scanning Quality: ~ 3824 x 2512 Pixels)

And with the huge 7" preview screen, you can see each slide or negative in "real time" before you scan it. When you're ready to scan, just hit the "OK/Scan" button, and your photo will be scanned and saved onto any SD memory card (NOT INCLUDED; 32GB or less) in just 1-2 seconds!

The Virtuoso 3.0 can automatically set the color & brightness of each scan, or you can control it manually by the easy access buttons on top of the scanner.

The scanner works with most common formats of slides, negatives, and film, including 35mm, 110, 126 negatives (both B&W and color) as well as standard 35mm slides (2"x2"in/50x50mm). The scanner comes with easy "slide-through" film holders, which make it very quick to load your slides & negative strips into the scanner. Adapters for 110 and 126 negatives are included too.

Once you've scanned some photos, you can connect your scanner directly to your TV to view them using any mini-HDMI-to-HDMI cable (included).

Or easily transfer your scanned photos to your PC or Mac by connecting the scanner to your computer. You can also transfer them by simply removing the SD card (NOT INCLUDED; 32GB or less) and inserting it into your computer.

What's In The Box: ClearClick Virtuoso 3.0 (Third Generation) Slide & Negative Scanner, Slide & Negative Holders for 35mm Negatives & 50x50mm Slides, Adapters For 110 & 126 Negatives, Cleaning Brush, USB Cable & Power Adapter, HDMI Cable

Not Included: SD Card (32 GB or less, Class 10 or higher) - Required, Not Included. (We recommend item number B0143RTB1E on Amazon, up to 32 GB.)


Zainab V.
2025-08-22 11:18:07
Hubby had thousand slides to do. over the years we tried many ways. This was so easy and quality is excellent. Goes fast. We are so grateful to have copied all those slides from years ago. Can adjust colors also. Did put negatives through and it does work.
M.A.
2025-07-31 14:42:27
The scanner worked very well out of the box. It's plug and play in that you can transfer the scans from the memory card to the computer without taking out the memory card from the scanner.The pictures come out fairly accurate. and adjusting the light balance is very easy.Scanning per picture is literally a push of the button and maybe a second for it to process.You don't have to take out the adapter between negative strips.All that said, here are some cons.1) Even with the negatives in the adapter tray, the negative can slide up or down and cut off a bit of the picture.2) I understand the need for it (mostly) but if the unit is on and you either put an SD card in, or take it out, the machine turns off.3) After scanning around 1500 or so negatives the buttons seem to want to take their sweet time in getting to the function I need. One example? I was sitting here for around a minute when I needed it to switch from a scanner to a viewer.All in all, I was happy with the product even though its "end of life" came way to quickly.
Dennis Levinski
2025-07-23 18:10:22
Out of the box it works as expected. Will be using it to scan 3-4000 35mm slides plus an yet undetermined amount of 35mmnegatives.Positioning the slides is a little bit fiddly to center each in the view area. Once the slide tray is full it is pretty easy to push and pull each end, then hit scan. I found using a tongue depressor (a popsicle stick should work) to position the last or single slides.Cleaning the slides is critical, all dirt shows plainly on a larger screen.The brightness and color adjustments are usable but seeing the effects on the 7" screen is not clearly seen, especially for old eyes, so I will use something like XNVIEW to make my final adjustments on the computer.You need to set the date and time each time you plug it into power, It forgets when power is removed.Overall it is an excellent device for the price vs features.
Steve
2025-05-16 14:09:51
I love this. Seriously. I'm not shilling for this device or this company. I'm certainly disappointed sometimes when I make a purchase on Amazon like everybody else. Not with Amazon but with the product. This product is great. One minute set up and the only thing you need to read the directions for is to understand the sequence of how to press the buttons. I have 250 old 35 mm slides. All of my mom and dad from the 40s and 50s. I wanted to convert them to a digital format and store them in my Google cloud, as well as put them on a DVD for backup. These are high resolution copies. I wouldn't put much Credence into the color shading you can do with the unit, or the brightness which are the only two aesthetic controls that it has. Once you put these on a memory card you can stick it into your computer and Photoshop works in miracles before and after. Some of them weren't fixable but that's not the fault of the machine. 85% of them were workable and some of them look like brand new. All old kodachromes. The system is great for slides. The slide adapter is like a manual conveyor belt. For less than $200 it's a great buy. That's what local companies get to do this, and then they send it out all over the country to have the work done. And they charge you $30 for a DVD. They also charge you for cloud space. And God forbid if UPS or USPS loses your package they'll offer you $100. Obviously when we all send pictures to be redone these are pictures that are irreplaceable. If you have some spare time do it yourself. If you don't have Photoshop pay for it and download it. It's one of the greatest tools to come out of the internet era.
Victor Chalfant
2025-04-10 13:21:11
I am a photographer and very picky about the quality of my images. I was in the process of archiving thousands of slides and negatives, so I thought I’d give this a try. It works really well and delivers great quality and resolution. It’s quick and allows me to see things easily. I’m using it mostly to share all our old family photos. It works perfectly for that. I don’t think it would be good at all for recording 8mm movies, but if you needed a single frame from one, this would probably do it. I e used it for slides, 35mm color and b&w negatives, and even some old 110 negatives. It works great in all of them. The 110 had some color shifting issues, and this machine allows for some corrections with that. I’ll probably need to do a bit more to them, but it’s much faster than using a flatbed scanner for all these.
Elon
2025-01-26 15:45:46
Overall I'm pretty happy with this machine. We have about 1,000 slides to digitize and don't want to pay a photo lab to do it for us. The machine gives the options to adjust the color and light saturation in the machine, but the result isn't always what I would expect, once I transfer the pictures to my computer. I've decided to just set everything to the middle settings and do any changes on my computer. That is working out pretty well. Another issue is that the slides move around in the holder and it is sometimes hard to get them in the correct place. And if they are not in the right place the picture can end up cropped on one side with a black line on the other side. That can be corrected by redoing the picture, deleting the bad one and renaming the new one to the original photo's name. All that being said, I'm basically quite happy with my purchase.
Stephen Kovacs
2025-01-22 13:31:16
Unit did not work Returned for credit.
Myron Achtman
2024-12-31 14:37:13
My ClearClick Virtuoso 3.0 worked very well for one day. On the second day, the exposure light from the unit started to pulsate on and off every second, rendering the device useless. I returned it via Amazon and ordered the equivalent device from Kodak instead. Hopefully, the Kodak device will work well for more than one day!Here is a summary of my observations from when the device worked on the first day. I really liked the 7" display, and the images looked very clear on the screen. Unfortunately, the actual .jpg scans were not nearly as sharp as they looked on the display screen.I set the ClearClick to 14MP (14 MegaPixels) because I did not want to use their "interpolated" resolution of 22MP. When using the 14MP setting, the .jpg files come out at 4320 x 2880 pixels. NOTE: this is only 12.4 MP, so ClearClick is exaggerating when they say it's 14MP. Therefore, a 35mm negative (or color slide) has a resolution of 3048 ppi. This sounds fantastic, and you would expect the scans to look razor sharp. But they're not.When using a dedicated film scanner or a professional flatbed scanner, a resolution of 3000 ppi generates very high-quality images. However, the ClearClick is NOT a scanner. It's simply an inexpensive "camera" that takes a picture of your film. The great advantage is that it only takes 2 seconds to generate the .jpg file. By comparison, when using a dedicated film scanner or a professional flatbed scanner at 3000ppi, it takes at least 3 minutes to make just one complete 35mm scan.The disadvantage of the ClearClick is that the scans are not sharp and that's because they are actually being created by a cheap "camera" with minimal optics. This brings us to another point, the matter of dust specks on the film. Because the ClearClick does not have high-quality optics, there are not too many obvious dust specks on the images. By comparison, when using a dedicated film scanner or a professional flatbed scanner, you might see hundreds of dust specks that the ClearClick simply does not resolve. That's why high-end scanners use special infrared technology to hide dust specks on the film scans.So, how do we deal with the low-quality images from the ClearClick. Well, that depends on your needs. For example, if you go ahead and make a 4" x 6" glossy print from the ClearClick .jpg file, it will look pretty good. However, if you make a poster-size print, it will definitely be "soft."When viewing the ClearClick scans on your computer monitor, they are rather "mushy." Keep in mind that if there are people in your images, their faces won't look great when viewing the files at 100% size on your monitor.I was able to drastically improve the quality of faces in my ClearClick images by importing the files into TOPAZ Photo AI, an expensive program (from TOPAZ Labs) that works miracles on people's faces. The TOPAZ software makes the faces look even better that what you can get from a dedicated film scanner or a professional flatbed scanner. It's absolutely amazing.So, I'm anxiously awaiting the arrival of my new Kodak device with its 7" screen and identical characteristics that match the ClearClick.My workflow is as follows:1) Obtain the 12.4 MP .jpg file from the SD Card that it was saved on in the ClearClick.2) Import the ClearClick .jpg file into TOPAZ Photo AI and let it work its magic on the people's faces. Save the enhanced TOPAZ version as a .tif file, rather than a .jpg file, to avoid further re-compression of the image. (NOTE: This can be done as a batch job in TOPAZ, so you can process dozens of files without even being at the computer.)3) Load the new TOPAZ .tif files into Photoshop and get rid of any obvious dust specks. Apply color corrections and other Photoshop enhancements if needed.Even though I have a high-end flatbed scanner, I prefer using the ClearClick because it's just so darn fast. I do not enjoy traditional film scanning when it takes 3 minutes per image!Hope this helps.
Graeme Cornelius
2024-12-19 11:54:29
Does what it says. Good resolution on slides. Limited picture adjustment. It is better to use a dedicated app on the computer. Small drawback is that it doesn't connect directly to the computer.Biggest issue is the slide tray. Poorly sized and allows the slides to slip out of alignment. Also only allows one slide at a time. My old unit allowed three.
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