Very good Shin.
Film will never die!
In the beginning I tried scanning negatives myself with various scanners with varying degrees of success but I realised quite quickly that it was time consuming and also at times frustrating when you inexplicable got strange marks on the file from the scanner and you had no idea why.
And scanning whole films was also long and tedious so I gave it up quite quickly and left that work to my fellow professionals.
When I still worked Analog in the digital world I would have had my films scanned in a development/scan package at Cyberlab Vienna,
Mid-range scans at 18mb per image on Cd Rom and also downloadable from home.
Easy at around €11.30 per 36 exposure film.
This way I had 36 x 18mb digital images saved as JPEG that I would do some additional work on and still have good image quality for screen and media printing.
I often had prints made up to 30x40cm with the scans and they were fine.
If I needed anything bigger I would have the negatives scanned individually up to 100mb and saved in Tiff.
There is also a "Pro-scan" level, which I have used for special stuff.
When one has had both scans done one sees the difference.
If you were scanning medium/large format film I would consider pursuing it but not for 35mm.
Nice cameras by the way!
But I have to admit I am still well and truly in love with my two Nikon D750 bodies.
Just lovely cameras to work with!