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Anonymous
A professional lab, most likely, instead of a one-hour-photo kind of place. Somewhere where the clerks will listen to your demands (such as pushprocessing and pullprocessing for you), and people are knowledgeable.
Another is to learn to develop it yourself to get the results you want.
About the scanner, it depends on if you're willing to shell out over 1000 bucks for a Nikon Coolscan (I honestly dont remember the price) or just want to buy a common flatbed with negative-scanning capabilities. In which case, I'd suggest a Canoscan 8800.
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