Prove your dad had a mullet in the 80s with this Kodak device

TL;DR: Your old family photos are fading—digitize them now with the Kodak Slide N Scan Film & Slide Scanner while it’s just $164.97 (reg.$224.99) through March 30.Somewhere in your home (or your parents’), buried in a dusty box, are decades of family memories trapped in film negatives and slides.

We’re talking vacation shots, baby pictures, embarrassing ’80s haircuts, and probably a few questionable fashion choices from the early 2000s.But unless you have a time machine (or a working slide projector), those moments are stuck in analog limbo.That’s why we love the Kodak Slide N Scan Film & Slide Scanner.

It’s a super easy-to-use device that lets you bring those old photos into the digital age—no darkroom or expensive lab required.For just $164.97 (reg.$224.99), you can rescue your old 35mm, 110, and 126 film negatives and slides and transform them into sharable, printable, never-gonna-fade-again digital files.The Kodak’s Slide N Scan isn’t just some clunky old-school scanner—it’s fast, intuitive, and built for anyone who wants to protect their memories without hiring a pro.

It has an easy-load film tray, so you can zip through tons of old photos in a single sitting.Plus, its 5-inch LCD lets you preview everything in real time, so you know exactly what you’re saving before hitting that scan button.No extra software is needed.

Just pop in a memory card (not included), scan your images, and boom—your family history is now social-media-ready.Want to relive Grandma’s wedding photos or show your kids what life was like before iPhones? You can connect the scanner directly to your TV or computer for a larger, more nostalgic trip down memory lane that everyone can view.Those slides and negatives won’t last forever.

The Slide N Scan ensures those priceless photos live on, in high-resolution digital form forever.And once they’re digitized, you can edit, print, email, or throw them in a slideshow at the next family reunion.Kee...

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Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

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