Jostein, I've noticed this same lack of sharpness in my own nighttime images where the exposure lasts several hours. Trees, hills and mountains have a very soft look to them. Photos of the same scene in the morning with the same lens, film and camera are nice and sharp. I have two theories as to why this is in my case:
1) How the lens is focused at night: it's just racked out to infinity, since I can't see anything through the viewfinder. 2) Color negative film (and maybe any film) loses acutance at longer exposures. t On 11/18/02 11:16 AM, Jostein wrote: > There is one thing that strikes me about the focus in these shots. > Presumably in focus, they seem blurred. It's especially evident in > Chet's photo when compared to the same scene by daylight. > > I don't doubt the eyesight of you guys, and I don't suspect you to > have flimsy tripods either. so I suppose there must be something > technical... > > Is it just a scanning matter, a matter of large apertures, or is it > something more peculiar? > > The first thing I thought of apart from scanning, was that resiprocity > failure had something to do with contrast rendering, but it shouldn't > be that serious, even at 1.5 minutes exposure. > > Any suggestions? (Including me imagining things?) > > Jostein > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Bruce Dayton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> >> http://pug.komkon.org/00octo/bkdPUG1000.html >> >> > >>> From Chet >> >> C> http://www.lookoutnow.com/parks/bryce_04.htm >> >> C> if anyone is curious. >> >

