Why? Because I'd be interested in seeing YOUR results. ;-)

Jack
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Thanks for all the comments.
> 
> I've spent a bit of time running more scans and now I'm figuring out 
> 
> what's what for 35mm and subminiature formats, but I thought I'd  
> respond to a couple of these notes.
> 
> >>    http://homepage.mac.com/ramarren/photo/PAW7/19b.htm
> >>    http://homepage.mac.com/godders/V700rez-detail-snips.jpg
> >
> From: Brendan MacRae <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > The res is definitely better at the 6400 dpi
> > resolution. But the file sizes are getting big.
> >
> > My question is, are you pulling out the grain, as
> > well? One of the things I've noticed when scanning
> > black and white is that going full tilt boogie for
> > resolution ends up giving me detail but with grain.
> > This is with the Coolscan 9000 ED. So, I generally
> > won't go more than 2000 ppi when scanning tri-x or
> > plus-x negs (the guy who runs the local lab in town
> > doesn't scan b/w at more than 1000 ppi, or so he tells
> > me, and he has the same setup as me). I haven't had
> > the oppurtunity to scan other kinds of b/w neg yet.
> > However, I will be trying some Fuji neopan 120
> > sometime in the near future.
> 
> There are tradeoffs. Sometimes you want to image the grain for effect
>  
> and then you have to deal with minor scratching and other blemishes  
> as well. Sometimes, you drop the scan rez or knock the focus off a  
> little bit so you can apply good sharpening techniques and end up  
> with something that looks identical but isn't full of grain noise.  
> More on this when I get to the 35mm/Minox scans.
> 
>  From the point of view of scanning resolution, 3200 is certainly  
> enough to get a very high quality print larger than anything I  
> normally make out of 645 format film (output resolution without  
> scaling is 360 ppi for a print area larger than 13x19 inch). 6400 ppi
>  
> is a huge amount of data overhead, it buys some other possibilities, 
> 
> but I don't know that it's actually worth the effort and disk space.
> 
> 
> From: Jack Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Anxious to see the 35mm scan comparisons. Put them up against a 100
>  
> > ISO
> > K10D image having received one click of "Auto Sharpen".
> 
> Why?
> 
> I'm not doing this for a "film vs digital" thesis. I'm doing this to 
> 
> characterize what the scanners I have at my disposal do so I can use 
> 
> them with film images I have already or will make in the future. I  
> already know what kind of quality I can get out of the K10D.
> 
> From: Mark Cassino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Can't say without seeing "actual pixels" but the scanner certainly
> > sounds impressive. I may look at getting one to replace my aging  
> > Epson 3200.
> 
> It is definitely a major step beyond the capabilities of the Epson  
> 2450/3200 generation scanners.
> 
> > One comment - do you need to scan at 6400 ppi? there are two ways
> of
> > looking at a larger film format - one is that you can make
> humongous
> > prints that look as good as moderate sized prints made from 35mm
> film.
> > The other is that you can make moderate size prints that look much
> > better than prints the same size made from 35mm film because they
> are
> > enlarged less - less grain, etc.
> >
> > So - looking at the quality of a 6400 dpi scan is one measure, but
> > looking at an 11 x 14 print from the 645 (which may be scanned at a
>  
> > much
> > lower resolution) is another.
> 
> As mentioned above, I doubt I need better than 3200 ppi scanning  
> resolution for 645 work. I haven't done print testing yet, but I  
> think the A3 print I made of the truck image (URL at top) proves to  
> me that it is more than up to the task at that resolution. I'm simply
>  
> exploring the capabilities ...  ;-)
> 
> Next installment: 35mm.
> 
> Godfrey
> 
> 
> 
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