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Canon CanoScan LiDE220 Photo and Document Scanner

  • Based on 1,189 reviews
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Oct 9 – Oct 15
Order within 21 hours and 29 minutes
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Features

  • With Send to Cloud you can easily upload your images to Cloud Services like Evernote and Dropbox
  • Auto Scan Mode automatically adjusts settings by detecting what you are scanning
  • Scan a letter sized document in approx. 10 seconds
  • Auto Document Fix automatically employs area by area correction for beautiful, easy to view scans
  • OS Compatibility Windows:5,6 Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 7, Windows 7 SP1, Windows Vista SP1, Vista SP2, Windows XP SP3 32 bit.5,6. Mac:5,6Mac OS X v10.6.8 10.95,6

Description

Offers advanced features, easy operation and "Send to Cloud" functionality. The LiDE220 lets you upload images to the Cloud with remarkable ease. Providing a maximum optical resolution of 4800 x 4800 dpi2, its vivid 48-bit color depth is capable of producing over 281 trillion possible colors. An Auto Document Fix feature automatically produces beautiful scans with advanced image analysis and area-by-area data correction, while Auto Scan Mode automatically evaluates the item being scanned and saves it with the appropriate settings. The LiDE220 scanner also helps you work efficiently with five EZ Buttons that enable you to scan, copy, Send to Cloud, or create a single or multipage PDF in a snap. It scans fast too, creating a letter-sized color scan in approximately 10 seconds. Plus, it comes with a stand to enable vertical scanning - accommodating workspaces of just about any size. And the Advanced Z-LidTM Expansion Top extends up approximately one-inch and over the platen to let you scan large items, such as textbooks or other thick documents. The LiDE220 scanner uses one USB cable for both data and power, so plugging in is easy. The LiDE 220 includes My Image Garden, a convenient software package that makes organizing your photos fun and easy. Scan Size (W x H): 8 1/2" x 11 7/10"; Bit Depth of Color: 48-bit Color; 16-bit Grayscale; Buttons: 5; Connector/Port/Interface: USB.


Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 14.4 x 1.6 inches


Item Weight: 3.4 pounds


Item model number: LiDE220


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: July 8, 2014


Manufacturer: Canon USA Inc.


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Oct 9 – Oct 15

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Needs much better software.
I have a lot of old family photos that I wanted to save for safe keeping. As photos age, the colors fade and they start to curl and crack. What if there was a fire? All those precious memories, lost. I decided that it was time to get a scanner and save those family treasures. I did a fair amount of Google work and investigated various scanner reviews. The Cannon LiDE220 was always at or near the top of every list. This is my first scanner so I didn't know what to expect. I had the notion that text documents would magically store as such. I was a little surprised to discover that most material saves a PDF image, in effect, a digital photo of a page. The image is just as it would be if I pointed my snapshot camera at a carefully focused page and stored it as a photograph. The image quality is surprisingly good. Very sharp and good color, too. I did notice that it's not easy to scan old photos since they often have a lot of curled edges. The scanners cover is light and did NOT pin the photos down flat as well as I had thought it would. As a result, the photos "pulled away" from the glass back-plate slightly and probably cost some sharpness. I may take a clothes iron to the photos and (carefully!), iron them flat for new scans. The scanner comes with a USB cable and I don't like it. It has the standard USB-A plug on one end, but instead of the usual USB-B plug (the square-shaped one, about 1/3 of a inch square, and often found on printers), this cable uses a tiny plug on the scanner end. The plug will be familiar to most of you, it's the same plug most cell-phone chargers use to plug into your phone. Why did Cannon use this tiny, fragile looking plug instead of the more robust USB-B plug? Another issue is that there is no On/Off switch. When I discovered this I nearly returned the unit in disgust. What is Cannon thinking? Most people will have this unit plugged into a desktop as a matter of course. Without a power switch you have two choices, both annoying. If you plug into a front USB port, the cord will block your disk drive (mine did the first time I used the drive), it caught my disc drawer and jammed it open. The alternative is to pull out a chair, crawl under the desk, bang your head, dodge spiders and hold a penlight in your teeth while looking for a rear USB port. Come on, Cannon. Note to Cannon: Put a lousy 30 cent switch on this thing. So annoyed was I with this foolish flaw that I would have returned the unit for it's nearest competitor, the Epson V19,..... were it not for the fact that the Epson V19 also doesn't have a power switch. Jeeze. Another strong criticism, is the lousy software. It installed easily on my desktop running Windows 7 home 64-bit. When I plugged the unit in I got the usual "New hardware detected" prompt followed by the also familiar prompt that drivers were being installed. The software is very un-intuitive. I installed the Image Garden software, and went nuts trying to figure out why my scans were not going to the folder I designated as My Scans. Later, I discovered that the Image Garden software sends everything to a default folder. Cannon could have saved me a day of frustration by mentioning that. Two important tips to know. First, there is a mechanical lock under the scanner for securing the mechanism for travel. It's easily overlooked and had I not un-locked it before powering up the unit I might have damaged something. Second, to get a REAL operating manual, Google....Cannon > LiDE220 > PDF Manual. The default CD-ROM manual and so-called online manuals are both nearly worthless. The PDF Manual is far more comprehensive. I nearly forgot to mention that the front panel buttons are rather hard to read in less than bright light. I wish Cannon has spent just another 30 cents on front panel illumination. Before buying this unit, I recommend downloading the PDF Manual (over 200 pages), and get acquainted with the unit first. I also discovered two quirks: Photos and pages must be inserted INVERTED as seen from the front. This is unintuitive, but that's how it takes them. Another surprise is that the Auto Scan function apparently has some kind of "face-recognition" software in it. When I placed photos of people in inverted form the software saved them as PDF documents. When the same people were scanned non-inverted, the software saved them as photo images. Weird. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2016 by D. Barber

  • Still Working Great After 4 Years - Really Good for Scanning Multiple Photos Into Separate Files
I bought this in 2018 for $80 and it is still going strong. I see it is currently listed for $300+, and in that case it's not worth it. But I've used this to convert countless old photo albums into digital files and love that the software will recognize each of the individual photos and let you confirm on screen that its AI interpreted the photos correctly. I've also used this to scan in my kids' artwork, which helps with the mom guilt of throwing out the majority of it. I haven't had great luck with the buttons on the scanner itself, but do all my scanning via the software on my laptop. It's very lightweight and portable and I love that it plugs in and powers up from my laptop itself, so I don't need to place myself near some power outlet. The DPI Resolution goes up to 600 for PDFs. you get the option to select the format (PDF, JPEG, etc.), the dpi and a matter of other features (reduce dust, image adjustment, fading correction, etc.). I also really like how you have the option to combine PDF scans so that they are all in one file, instead of individual pages (although you can do individual pages too if you prefer). Highly recommend. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2022 by AS

  • Great Scanner, but don't despair if auto-crop doesn't work right away
I love this Scanner mainly for the document option: you can scan as many letters/documents as you want and it will create a single pdf from it when you are ready (it will ask you after every scan if you want to continue scanning or exit). This is SO practical! If you don't like the autocrop option you can pre-set a printing size or manually select the print frame. What I also love about this scanner is the autocrop function of photos. You could place 3 photos on the scanner (apart from each other) and scan "photos" and it will give you 3 different image files, one per photo. This will save you so much more time than scanning it individually. Aside from these functions the scanner is appealing in design, produces great quality scans, is very light, doesn't need much space, is directly connected to your computer (no seperate power cable), and it is very easy to use. I am writing this review because the auto-crop option did not work right away for me and it drove me crazy (and cost me probably 2h). I had used this scanner at my mom's and knew exactly what it could do and expected the same when I bought my own. I skipped installation as I had bought the same model, but when I started to scan seperate photos during my initial scans, it wouldn't auto-crop it. And I couldn't let it go either. So I started playing around with the settings and ended up using ScanGear to preview the scans and select my own photo frames for the scan. That worked, but I was not happy. It didn't make sense and I couldn't find any help online either. Eventually I had to give up and just played around with different paper size formats, depending on what I wanted to scan. But surprisingly, after I scanned a couple of cards in the document mode, I suddenly noticed that with my final scans it was auto-cropping just as I was used to. What? I don't have any logical explanation for that, I didn't do anything special or different, it's just like it "clicked" and suddenly worked. Today I scanned another session and auto-crop worked right away, so I don't expect any issues any more now, the scanner works great! My guess is that it just needed to scan a couple times to "adjust" after using the scanner for the first time. I still don't really know what happened, but I wanted to let people know in case they experience the same. Don't despair, just keep trying and scanning, and hopefully not too much later it will work for you, too!!! I didn't experience this issue at my moms, because I was scanning single photos over and over again, for 2 days, so there was plenty of time for the scanner to get adjusted, and I didn't know about the auto-crop function either, I found out about it by coincidence, and it make me love the scanner even more! I am so excited to get rid of all my paper piles in the house and get everything digitally organized. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2016 by Susanne Lang

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