It's all about having a diode array xray detector or any other reasonably sensitive digital xray detector. You can work with small beam currents and still get beautiful pictures, 300uA @ 35kV =>12W beam power, lol.
Small beam current also produces a small focal spot and therby sharp images, since you only need a small filament and get no overheated/melted spot on anode.
A while ago, I also played around with a experimental xray setup, but quickly decided that I better stop until I get good lead shielding, since my old polish DP-66 geiger counter clicked madly from backscatter.
The tube was behind more than 5cm of lead blocks, so no direct xray hit me, only the backscatter from the wall. Unfortunately I somehow got really bad xray intensifying screens that failed to glow even when directly in front of the tube. A movie camera that was placed in front of it showed "snow storm" as the HV was switched on. ZnS doped glow in the dark plastics also glowed quite nicely.
HV supply consisted of a HP 6274 PSU that was connected to a Mazzilli driver on a homemade flyback transformer. Output went into a Cockcroft–Walton multiplier that finally generated around 100kV DC at a few mA max.
Does anyone btw know a document scanner that only needs small amounts of light? I thought about converting normal scanners into xray detectors by placing an intensifying screen on top of it and disconnecting the power of the LEDs or CCFD that usually iluminate the document. In theory this setup should have much better light collecting capabilities and is much smaller than the long exposure DSLR setups that are usually used. Furthermore there's no barrel distortion caused by uneven distance from camera lens that has to be corrected in GIMP. Xray noise could be eliminated by running multiple scans and ANDing the reults.
The Canon N670 (cheap crap scanner) that I tested for that purpose had really bad ISO sensitivity (tested by placing multiple layers of newspaper between scanner and flashlight), so bad that I doubt it could pick up any light from a intensifying screen.