Thanks yoc, I'll check those out sometime.
I'm scanning pages now for the Danger is our Business No1 which should be arriving tommorrow.
Doing an average I'm getting around 3 1/2 minutes per page if there are no complications. (heh heh no complications ya right

)
That's the basic preview, crop, scan and save. Then resizing to fit the page, the impartations placed within the pages of this sites title and scanner name and the data/title page takes a bit more time and then the zip file so it's probably a minimum best of 2 1/2hours per 32pager.
I can see where to really make a pretty boy scan it would take quite a bit of finesse to pull off a quality piece just seeing the raw material in these old books that one has to deal with.
Just looking at the paper tone discoloring is enough for concerns let alone the idea of trying to crop a page to present a reasonable squareness when the papercutting techniques from back then left much to be desired if even expecting a 90degree alignment with the page edges and the panels page after page when after awhile you are glad to discover even one. snorK*
And the books themselves aren't always found to be at 90degrees on all four corners so that really presents a situation to put the thinking cap on.
I would imagine that there are computer techniques available that would permit the realignment by degrees of a scanned page
so regardless of the misaligned print on the paper and the +-90degree corners, a scan could be cropped to perfect alignment with the panels in effect making a better presentation than the original copy... in that view of things.
Seems the real touch would be finding the right balance with each book depending on the severity of the aging and abuse each has incurred.
Looks to be very challenging. Sounds like the more tools available the better production. A lot more to it than this simple scanning of whatever is before you and hiding under the banner of 'Liking a raw untouched copy' because of the time it takes to produce a scan and not wanting to add any more to it than you already have.
EEK! Did I just say that?