View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 1:48 pm Post subject: film resolution (don't miss this one) |
|
|
poilu wrote:
I read in various forum that 35mm negative resolution is 6-8mb
Here is a handheld shot with the cheap 2 euros negative from Lidl
push here for bigger view
Here is a crop equivalent to a dslr of 10Mpixels
Want more?
Here is a crop equivalent to a dslr of 40Mpixels
So what is film resolution?
Ok this one is with Hollywood, don't wait the same with common lens _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Orio
Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Posts: 29545 Location: West Emilia
Expire: 2012-12-04
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 2:43 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Orio wrote:
Amazing enlargements!
I think that for film performance, taking a correct exposure at the moment of shooting, is a key factor.
WHen exposure was good (and development correct), sometimes enlargements from film can be amazing, like in your case esp. the last one. _________________ Orio, Administrator
T*
NE CEDE MALIS AUDENTIOR ITO
Ferrania film is reborn! http://www.filmferrania.it/
Support the Ornano film chemicals company and help them survive!
http://forum.mflenses.com/ornano-chemical-products-t55525.html |
|
Back to top |
|
|
LucisPictor
Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 17633 Location: Oberhessen, Germany / Maidstone ('95-'96)
Expire: 2013-12-03
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 2:43 pm Post subject: |
|
|
LucisPictor wrote:
Great lens + decent low ISO film = high resolution.
It has always been like that. _________________ Personal forum activity on pause every now and again (due to job obligations)!
Carsten, former Moderator
Things ON SALE
Carsten = "KAPCTEH" = "Karusutenu" | T-shirt?.........................My photos from Emilia: http://www.schouler.net/emilia/emilia2011.html
My gear: http://retrocameracs.wordpress.com/ausrustung/
Old list: http://forum.mflenses.com/viewtopic.php?t=65 (Not up-to-date, sorry!) | http://www.lucispictor.de | http://www.alensaweek.wordpress.com |
http://www.retrocamera.de |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Sandie
Joined: 05 May 2008 Posts: 217 Location: Austria
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 2:56 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Sandie wrote:
The 35mm negative resolution is 16-18M pixels. _________________ Canon 5DII + Canon 5D + Canon 350D + Pentax MZ10 + Pracktica BX20 + Mamiya 1000TL + Yashica TL Electro X + Yashica FR1 + Pentax ES II
Carl Zeiss Jena: Flektogon 20/f4, Flektogon 35/f2.4, Pancolar 50/f1.4, Pancolar 50/f1.8, Tessar 50/f2.8, Pancolar 80/f1.8, Sonnar 135/f3.5, Sonnar 135/f4, Sonnar 180/f2.8;
Pentacon: 50/f1.8, 135/f2.8, 200/f4, 300/f4;
Meyer: Orestegon 29/f2.8, Lydith 30/f3.5, Domiplan 50/f2.8, Trioplan 100/f2.8, Orestor 100/f2.8, Telemegor 250/f5.5;
Revuenon: 24/f4(Ennalyt), 28/f3.5(Ennalyt), 200/f3.5(Tomioka);
Yashica: 28/f2.8; 55/f1.2;
Soligor 135/f2.8; 35/f2.8;
Misc: Schacht 50/f2.8; Steinheil 135/f3.5; Mamiya 55/f1.4; Fujinon 135/f3.5; Tokina 70-220/f3.5; Tamron 28/f2.5; Helios 58/f2; Kiron 28/f2; Volna 80/f2.8; Mir 24M 35/f2;Carenar 85-210/f4.5; Olympus 50/f1.8; Chinon 35-80/f3.5-4.9; Pentax 55/f2;
Last edited by Sandie on Tue Sep 09, 2008 4:37 pm; edited 2 times in total |
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 3:07 pm Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
Orio wrote: |
I think that for film performance, taking a correct exposure at the moment of shooting, is a key factor |
The film have greater dynamic range than digital, the enlarged zone is in shadows and underexposed versus the whole scene
I try diverse lens this week-end and I directly see that Hollywood give incredible result
I think that new negative are better and offer the resolution of 10 years ago slide
Many use cheap flat scanner, they are not impressed by the results and claim that negative is only 6Mpixels
This one is scanned with 40D on bellows
Carsten wrote: |
Great lens + decent low ISO film = high resolution |
True, but I thought that this cheap film was not very good
Shooting with film camera is great
I can wait more months for the 5DII
At 0.08 euro the shot (2+1 for develop /36), it is not so expensive
Sandie wrote: |
The 35mm negative resolution is 16-18mb |
I also believed that, now I can see it _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Rob Leslie
Joined: 20 Mar 2007 Posts: 1103 Location: UK Swindon
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 4:01 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Rob Leslie wrote:
I agree with the school of thought that believes the only way to compare film and digital is with prints.
I did this many years ago and know many others at our photo club who have done all the practical tests. A 12 x 10 inch (Chemical) print BW or colour from 35mm will do the job.
If you wish to read some ‘Expert’ opinion based on comparing the finished results look at Luminous Landscape. The article is rather old but the conclusion can’t really go out of date.
http://luminous-landscape.com/reviews/cameras/d30/d30_vs_film.shtml
I thought the silly digital vs film argument was over five plus years ago.
I’m sure many Canon 5D owners will be pleased to know some still believe a S/H £10 film camera can better their investment!
I’m not biased I still shoot film for fun. I have used 4 x 36 exposures in the past 3-4 weeks and have three film cameras with film in them at the moment. And I have just bought yet another SD card! _________________ Pentax K10D & K100D. Many Tamron Adaptall SP lenses, Fujinon f4.5 400mm. A loved Lens Baby 2, Lubitel triplet +++ and many film cameras. Mainly a Digital user inc G5, GR2
http://robstreet.blogspot.com/
http://robleslie.blogspot.com/
http://roblesliephotography.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/64956578@N00/ |
|
Back to top |
|
|
trifox
Joined: 14 May 2008 Posts: 3614 Location: UK
Expire: 2014-05-29
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 5:40 pm Post subject: |
|
|
trifox wrote:
hi poilu!!!
YOU wanna kill me
I am trying to be converted myself to film cameras and you've sent this!
Thats a great example ! I love it !
Can you tell me more details? Exp, ISO etc..
thanks
tf |
|
Back to top |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE
Joined: 20 Aug 2007 Posts: 5486 Location: Left Coast
Expire: 2011-11-18
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 6:12 pm Post subject: |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE wrote:
Nice presentation Poilu
Hard to deny what we see here.
Film is here (to stay or not) lets use it
To me it is funny in a way to show this shot. It is plain to see that the film brings it home no question.
But it is also true that the 40D is the one delivering the message (neg shot with bellos and 40D _________________ Moderator |
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 6:41 pm Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
Trifox wrote: |
Can you tell me more details? Exp, ISO etc.. |
HeHe! Film doesn't have exif
the film is Fuji Z200 (200 iso)
It was 7pm so I set f5.6, the speed was low but I am not sure about it
This place is always crowed, I had to wait 15 sec to find a hole and got less than 1s to fire
Btw I was completely lost with the 28mm. To much time with the cropped where 45mm (28mm on crop) is my minimum.
I scan with bellows. It take me 9min by film, 15 sec by frame (time for positioning film, scan is 1/200s)
After I open all the pics in pp camera raw and apply my preset who invert the pic and correct color.
I check the frame who need exposure and WB correction
I correct by batch of same condition with 'synchronize'
I save images as small jpg for reference and keep the selected raw as negative
Then I exif the jpg with the lens as I forget fast
The equivalent to 10Mp is easy as it is all the frame with my 40D
For 40Mp, I scan a part of the neg then resample to get the double of the size at 10Mp who correspond to a dslr of 40
It is quite boring. I could pay 8 euros to get a cd but I don't like their noise reduction and pseudo colors
I have a polaroid slide scanner sprintscan+ but it would take a long time to pass a whole film and correcting colors is not easy.
Flat scanner is also a solution but they are very slow and not so precise
sunshine wrote: |
But it is also true that the 40D is the one delivering the message (neg shot with bellos and 40D |
Without the 40D, I would never got back to film
The 9 min scan by film is what decide me, also liveview is important for precise focus and frame positioning _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE
Joined: 20 Aug 2007 Posts: 5486 Location: Left Coast
Expire: 2011-11-18
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 7:10 pm Post subject: |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE wrote:
Quote: |
Without the 40D, I would never got back to film Wink |
Oh Yes of course. And that is great.
I just think it is funny and Ironic in this situation _________________ Moderator |
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 7:16 pm Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
sunshine wrote: |
I just think it is funny and Ironic in this situation |
the same funny & ironic that using a >50year old lens on a dslr _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE
Joined: 20 Aug 2007 Posts: 5486 Location: Left Coast
Expire: 2011-11-18
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 7:31 pm Post subject: |
|
|
F16SUNSHINE wrote:
Sure
Like that _________________ Moderator |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Katastrofo
Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 10405 Location: USA
Expire: 2013-11-19
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 10:40 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Katastrofo wrote:
Poilu, did you remember what you had for dinner that day? Be sure to
include that in your info!
Stunning results! I feel like writing sonnets or sumptin...
I think using the 40D as a draft animal is key here. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Schnauzer
Joined: 09 Apr 2008 Posts: 2155 Location: Maine, USA
Expire: 2012-03-08
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 11:08 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Schnauzer wrote:
I would never guess that first one is film. _________________ Ron |
|
Back to top |
|
|
A G Photography
Joined: 11 May 2008 Posts: 1480 Location: Bologna - Italy
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2008 11:12 pm Post subject: |
|
|
A G Photography wrote:
While I don't doubt the images in those example confirm the theory expressed still reading at the end:
Quote: |
"Hi Michael, I've come across your article on the D30 versus film, I agree absolutely with all your conclusions, and I can add something. I own a drum scanner capable of 10,000 ppi and 4.6 D and also made tests with Provia 100F, scanning at 5000 ppi (the theoretical limit of film resolution). At that res the grain shows clearly so the D30 prints is vastly superior. The most approximated look to a D30 file is a 4x5 transparency drum scanned to match the size of a print from the D30+GF Pro (30x40 cm). So I too am impressed by the performance of the D30. It seems that all we used to know about photography no longer applies !!" |
made me laugh for a good quarter hour. A 4x5 transparency... suuuuuuure... Maybe one impressed by a stenopeic camera
I concur that the digital versus film argument is basically silly, they're different medium with different applications.
If "no grain" is all I want from an image then digital is superior, if I want subtler tone transitions, milder upper and lower shoulders or just a credible B&W image, film is the way to go. _________________ Alessandro
My Photography Website
My Blog about Photography and Italian Cuisine
My Photostream on Flickr
--------------------------------------------------------
DSLR: Nikon d80, Olympus e410
SLR: Chinon CX, Fujica ST605n, Nikon f601, Pentacon FM, Pentax Spotmatic SPII, Praktica FX, Praktica FX2, Voigtlander VST1, Yashica FX-3, Zeiss Contaflex
RF: Altissa Altix, Zorki Ie, Kiev 4b
Medium Format: Pentacon Six TL, Zeiss Ikonta 520/2, Mockba 4, Voigtlander Bessa I, Agfa Isolette II, Agfa Isola
Large Format: Cambo SC 4x5, Rodenstock Sinaron 150/5.6, Rodenstock Rodagon 150/5.6, Schneider Kreuznach Symmar 180/5.6
Lenses
Nikkors: 28/3.5 AIS, 35/2, 50/1.8, 50/2 H, Micro 55/3.5, Micro 60/2.8, 85/1.8, 135/3.5 AI, 200/4 NAI, 18-55/3.5-5.6, 28-80/3.5-5.6, 55-200/4-5.6
CY: Distagon 28/2.8, Planar 50/1.4, Yashika 50/1.7, Sonnar 135/2.8
CZJ m42-Exakta: Flektogon 20/4, Flektogon 35/2.8, Tessar 40/4.5, Tessar 50/2.8, Pancolar 50/1.8, Pancolar 50/2, Biotar 58/2, Biotar 75/1.5, Tessar 80/2.8, Sonnar 135/3.5, Sonnar 135/4, Triotar 135/4
CZJ P6: Flektogon 50/4, Flektogon 65/2.8, Biometar 80/2.8, Biometar 120/2.8, Sonnar 180/2.8
Meyer-Pentacon: Orestegon 29/2.8, Pentacon 29/2.8, Lydith 30/3.5, Primagon 35/4.5, Helioplan 40/4.5, Domiplan 50/2.8, Primotar 50/3.5, Oreston 50/1.8, Primoplan 58/1.9, Orestor 100/2.8, Trioplan 100/2.8, Helioplan 135/4.5, Orestor 135/2.8, Pentacon 135/2.8, Primotar 135/3.5, Primotar 180/3.5, Telemegor 180/5.5, Orestegor 200/4, Pentacon 200/4, Orestegor 300/4, Telemegor 300/4.5, Telemegor 400/5.5
Schneider-Kreuznach: Curtagon 28/4, Curtagon 35/2.8, Xenon 50/1.9, Xenar 50/2.8, Tele Xenar 135/3.5, Tele Xenar 200/4
Russians: Arsat Zodiak 30/3.5, Mir-I 37/2.8, Volna-9 50/2.8, Industar-50 50/3.5, Industar-61 50/2.8, Helios 44 58/2, Helios 44-2 58/2, Helios 44-M-4 58/2, Volna-3 80/2.8, Helios 40 85/1.5, Jupiter 9 85/2, Jupiter 11 135/4
Others: Chinon-Tomioka 55/1.4, Helios 28/2.8, Isco Iscotar 50/2.8, Konica Hexanon 40/1.8, Ludwig Meritar 50/2.9, Schacht Travegon 35/3.5, Schacht Travenon 135/4.5, Sekor 55/1.8, Sigma MF 28/2.8, S-Takumar, 28/3.5, S-Takumar 50/1.4, S-Takumar 55/1.8, S-Takumar 55/2, Steinheil Quinar 135/2.8, Steinheil Culminar 135/4.5, Vivitar 135/2.8, Voigtlander Ultron 50/1.8, Yashica Yashinon DX 50/1.4, Zuiko MC Auto-W 28/2.8
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
Rob Leslie
Joined: 20 Mar 2007 Posts: 1103 Location: UK Swindon
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 12:10 am Post subject: |
|
|
Rob Leslie wrote:
A G Photography wrote: |
While I don't doubt the images in those example confirm the theory expressed still reading at the end:
Quote: |
"Hi Michael, I've come across your article on the D30 versus film, I agree absolutely with all your conclusions, and I can add something. I own a drum scanner capable of 10,000 ppi and 4.6 D and also made tests with Provia 100F, scanning at 5000 ppi (the theoretical limit of film resolution). At that res the grain shows clearly so the D30 prints is vastly superior. The most approximated look to a D30 file is a 4x5 transparency drum scanned to match the size of a print from the D30+GF Pro (30x40 cm). So I too am impressed by the performance of the D30. It seems that all we used to know about photography no longer applies !!" |
made me laugh for a good quarter hour. A 4x5 transparency... suuuuuuure... Maybe one impressed by a stenopeic camera
I concur that the digital versus film argument is basically silly, they're different medium with different applications.
If "no grain" is all I want from an image then digital is superior, if I want subtler tone transitions, milder upper and lower shoulders or just a credible B&W image, film is the way to go. |
I agree a 4x5 can still give any DSLR a run for its money.
Back in the late 1980s we compared a drum scanned 35mm and 6x6 for high quality colour reproduction both shooting Extachrome and the difference was fantastic, 35mm was rejected.
I have a quote from the late Patrick Lichfield (Photoshop and the professional) saying before his studio went digital (2000) they never did advertising posters, but with digital no problem and no messing about with view cameras.
At the time he was talking about digital backs but things have moved on in the past 8 years and the DSLR has taken big leaps since the humble D30 _________________ Pentax K10D & K100D. Many Tamron Adaptall SP lenses, Fujinon f4.5 400mm. A loved Lens Baby 2, Lubitel triplet +++ and many film cameras. Mainly a Digital user inc G5, GR2
http://robstreet.blogspot.com/
http://robleslie.blogspot.com/
http://roblesliephotography.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/64956578@N00/ |
|
Back to top |
|
|
A G Photography
Joined: 11 May 2008 Posts: 1480 Location: Bologna - Italy
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 7:30 am Post subject: |
|
|
A G Photography wrote:
Confronting the film and digital medium, with film scanned (with a prosumer scanner like Epson v700, an Imacon would give better results) to have the same "grainless" and "sharp" feeling of digital, I came out with these results:
35 mm film = 3-6 MP (a dedicated 35mm scanner would give you a lot better results)
6x9 folder with triplet lens = 8-10 MP
6x9 folder with tessar lens = 12-14 MP
6x6 with good lenses (CZJ x P6) = 24-30 MP
The ranges depend a lot on the quality of the film.
Since 4x5 inches is about 10x12 cm, almost 4 times a 6x6, I just guess that the one saying the Canon d30 is at that level did probably forgot to put his glasses on before talking.
About the poster thing, I really don't know, but I remember to have seen this shot in so many book covers, posters, etc
and it was taken on a 35mm Kodachrome 64 by Steve Mc Curry of NG.
Digital is very practical, I love it. But some stuff on the net is just plain disinformation (and probable hidden advertisements). _________________ Alessandro
My Photography Website
My Blog about Photography and Italian Cuisine
My Photostream on Flickr
--------------------------------------------------------
DSLR: Nikon d80, Olympus e410
SLR: Chinon CX, Fujica ST605n, Nikon f601, Pentacon FM, Pentax Spotmatic SPII, Praktica FX, Praktica FX2, Voigtlander VST1, Yashica FX-3, Zeiss Contaflex
RF: Altissa Altix, Zorki Ie, Kiev 4b
Medium Format: Pentacon Six TL, Zeiss Ikonta 520/2, Mockba 4, Voigtlander Bessa I, Agfa Isolette II, Agfa Isola
Large Format: Cambo SC 4x5, Rodenstock Sinaron 150/5.6, Rodenstock Rodagon 150/5.6, Schneider Kreuznach Symmar 180/5.6
Lenses
Nikkors: 28/3.5 AIS, 35/2, 50/1.8, 50/2 H, Micro 55/3.5, Micro 60/2.8, 85/1.8, 135/3.5 AI, 200/4 NAI, 18-55/3.5-5.6, 28-80/3.5-5.6, 55-200/4-5.6
CY: Distagon 28/2.8, Planar 50/1.4, Yashika 50/1.7, Sonnar 135/2.8
CZJ m42-Exakta: Flektogon 20/4, Flektogon 35/2.8, Tessar 40/4.5, Tessar 50/2.8, Pancolar 50/1.8, Pancolar 50/2, Biotar 58/2, Biotar 75/1.5, Tessar 80/2.8, Sonnar 135/3.5, Sonnar 135/4, Triotar 135/4
CZJ P6: Flektogon 50/4, Flektogon 65/2.8, Biometar 80/2.8, Biometar 120/2.8, Sonnar 180/2.8
Meyer-Pentacon: Orestegon 29/2.8, Pentacon 29/2.8, Lydith 30/3.5, Primagon 35/4.5, Helioplan 40/4.5, Domiplan 50/2.8, Primotar 50/3.5, Oreston 50/1.8, Primoplan 58/1.9, Orestor 100/2.8, Trioplan 100/2.8, Helioplan 135/4.5, Orestor 135/2.8, Pentacon 135/2.8, Primotar 135/3.5, Primotar 180/3.5, Telemegor 180/5.5, Orestegor 200/4, Pentacon 200/4, Orestegor 300/4, Telemegor 300/4.5, Telemegor 400/5.5
Schneider-Kreuznach: Curtagon 28/4, Curtagon 35/2.8, Xenon 50/1.9, Xenar 50/2.8, Tele Xenar 135/3.5, Tele Xenar 200/4
Russians: Arsat Zodiak 30/3.5, Mir-I 37/2.8, Volna-9 50/2.8, Industar-50 50/3.5, Industar-61 50/2.8, Helios 44 58/2, Helios 44-2 58/2, Helios 44-M-4 58/2, Volna-3 80/2.8, Helios 40 85/1.5, Jupiter 9 85/2, Jupiter 11 135/4
Others: Chinon-Tomioka 55/1.4, Helios 28/2.8, Isco Iscotar 50/2.8, Konica Hexanon 40/1.8, Ludwig Meritar 50/2.9, Schacht Travegon 35/3.5, Schacht Travenon 135/4.5, Sekor 55/1.8, Sigma MF 28/2.8, S-Takumar, 28/3.5, S-Takumar 50/1.4, S-Takumar 55/1.8, S-Takumar 55/2, Steinheil Quinar 135/2.8, Steinheil Culminar 135/4.5, Vivitar 135/2.8, Voigtlander Ultron 50/1.8, Yashica Yashinon DX 50/1.4, Zuiko MC Auto-W 28/2.8
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 9:03 am Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
Rob wrote: |
I’m sure many Canon 5D owners will be pleased to know some still believe a S/H £10 film camera can better their investment! |
I shot the scene this morning with digital for the hard believer
Tokina 12-24 on 40D @ F11
resized to be compared with the film sample from previous page
It is a little wider because of the 95% of the viewfinder I used to frame
It is not the same light condition but I have other things to do
A sensor of 10Mp cannot show the text
You can enlarge as much you want, digital cannot recover missing details _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Rob Leslie
Joined: 20 Mar 2007 Posts: 1103 Location: UK Swindon
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 9:32 am Post subject: |
|
|
Rob Leslie wrote:
A lot of the potential of digital is lost by some people due to poor PP or shooting in JPEG. Every year we see new members join our local Photo Society and their only PP knowledge is adjustment of brightness and contrast, or a reliance on key stroke auto corrections, few have a good working knowledge of RAW conversion with most relying on the auto settings. Some even can't do a correct exposure!
IMO to get the best from digital requires more practice than darkroom printing, yet few seem to be willing to read a few books and go on a Adobe introduction course, or even read a few serious tutorials on the web.
Luckily we have some very enthusiastic amateurs who do make those efforts and I am often envious of the fantastic results they get. Perhaps I’m getting old but I have been doing Photoshop (Scanning and cameras) since the late 1980s and I still ‘Need’ to know more.
Nothing changes, you could spend a lifetime in the darkroom learning and now it’s a lifetime to learn digital. Unfortunately (For them) there will be always be those who when confronted with the problems of digital (Scanning and cameras) will just seek the quick and easy way and refuse to spend time trying to get the best results. Perhaps those who say digital = quantity are right in that respect. I mean who wants to spend time doing two or three RAW conversions of a good shot when the camera can shoot finished JPEGs!
Of course all that is no problem for us. IMO it is now far easier to produce decent results when others can’t be bothered to spend an hour or two on an image.
Anyway there is always the excuse that one prefers the pure image straight from the camera (???) being a ‘Purist’ often saves a lot of work and effort and no learning!
It ‘s an interesting idea (Amazing) that the 40D ( A great camera) can produce all that detail from copying a film negative but can’t produce it when recording reality?
Something wrong there!
The digital image demonstrates the point very well thank you for posting it.
Just shot this as a test with a very poor and old Sigma f3.5/5.6 24-70mm UC AF lens (Cost £20) Pentax K10D 400asa RAW.
Resized up to a 20 inch print (300dpi) = 6144 x 4113 pixels
_________________ Pentax K10D & K100D. Many Tamron Adaptall SP lenses, Fujinon f4.5 400mm. A loved Lens Baby 2, Lubitel triplet +++ and many film cameras. Mainly a Digital user inc G5, GR2
http://robstreet.blogspot.com/
http://robleslie.blogspot.com/
http://roblesliephotography.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/64956578@N00/ |
|
Back to top |
|
|
DSG
Joined: 04 Mar 2007 Posts: 544 Location: London, UK.
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 12:05 pm Post subject: Theres digital and theres digital... |
|
|
DSG wrote:
The problem with DSLR's using conventional Bayer/CFA sensors is that Bayer sensors cannot resolve detail to less than about 3 pixels in width or height.
DSLR's using Foveon X3 sensors on the other hand can resolve detail right down to a single pixel...This is what makes pics from Sigma cameras much more film-like than those from DSLR's from other brands. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 12:16 pm Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
I just scan the neg with the Nikon 9000 (best slide scanner) at 4000 dpi
http://www.nikonusa.com/Find-Your-Nikon/Product/Film-Scanners/9237/Super-COOLSCAN-9000-ED.html
no noise reduction, no Ice, no contrast just sharpening
with noise reduction, I loss details and letter no so sharp
For reference this is with the 40D
noise reduction, contrast & sharpened
The 40D look better because it is scanned at 8000dpi, noise reducted then resized and sharpened
But the letter on the Nikon are more fine, I think this is due to the Bayer matrix interpolation. With a Foveon, I would probably get better results
Rob wrote: |
It ‘s an interesting idea (Amazing) that the 40D ( A great camera) can produce all that detail from copying a film negative but can’t produce it when recording reality?
Something wrong there! |
Easy! the 40D is used in optimal condition when scanning negative
powerful flash give the max resolution, the 40D really don't need any sharpening from film scanning
In normal light, lens on 40D cannot give optimal result _________________ T*
Last edited by poilu on Wed Sep 10, 2008 12:48 pm; edited 1 time in total |
|
Back to top |
|
|
A G Photography
Joined: 11 May 2008 Posts: 1480 Location: Bologna - Italy
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 12:47 pm Post subject: |
|
|
A G Photography wrote:
Impressive results in comparison with Nikon Coolscan 9000. My only problem is that I usually have 120 film to scan so I'd need a digital MF back to get similar resolution not a cheap way it seems. _________________ Alessandro
My Photography Website
My Blog about Photography and Italian Cuisine
My Photostream on Flickr
--------------------------------------------------------
DSLR: Nikon d80, Olympus e410
SLR: Chinon CX, Fujica ST605n, Nikon f601, Pentacon FM, Pentax Spotmatic SPII, Praktica FX, Praktica FX2, Voigtlander VST1, Yashica FX-3, Zeiss Contaflex
RF: Altissa Altix, Zorki Ie, Kiev 4b
Medium Format: Pentacon Six TL, Zeiss Ikonta 520/2, Mockba 4, Voigtlander Bessa I, Agfa Isolette II, Agfa Isola
Large Format: Cambo SC 4x5, Rodenstock Sinaron 150/5.6, Rodenstock Rodagon 150/5.6, Schneider Kreuznach Symmar 180/5.6
Lenses
Nikkors: 28/3.5 AIS, 35/2, 50/1.8, 50/2 H, Micro 55/3.5, Micro 60/2.8, 85/1.8, 135/3.5 AI, 200/4 NAI, 18-55/3.5-5.6, 28-80/3.5-5.6, 55-200/4-5.6
CY: Distagon 28/2.8, Planar 50/1.4, Yashika 50/1.7, Sonnar 135/2.8
CZJ m42-Exakta: Flektogon 20/4, Flektogon 35/2.8, Tessar 40/4.5, Tessar 50/2.8, Pancolar 50/1.8, Pancolar 50/2, Biotar 58/2, Biotar 75/1.5, Tessar 80/2.8, Sonnar 135/3.5, Sonnar 135/4, Triotar 135/4
CZJ P6: Flektogon 50/4, Flektogon 65/2.8, Biometar 80/2.8, Biometar 120/2.8, Sonnar 180/2.8
Meyer-Pentacon: Orestegon 29/2.8, Pentacon 29/2.8, Lydith 30/3.5, Primagon 35/4.5, Helioplan 40/4.5, Domiplan 50/2.8, Primotar 50/3.5, Oreston 50/1.8, Primoplan 58/1.9, Orestor 100/2.8, Trioplan 100/2.8, Helioplan 135/4.5, Orestor 135/2.8, Pentacon 135/2.8, Primotar 135/3.5, Primotar 180/3.5, Telemegor 180/5.5, Orestegor 200/4, Pentacon 200/4, Orestegor 300/4, Telemegor 300/4.5, Telemegor 400/5.5
Schneider-Kreuznach: Curtagon 28/4, Curtagon 35/2.8, Xenon 50/1.9, Xenar 50/2.8, Tele Xenar 135/3.5, Tele Xenar 200/4
Russians: Arsat Zodiak 30/3.5, Mir-I 37/2.8, Volna-9 50/2.8, Industar-50 50/3.5, Industar-61 50/2.8, Helios 44 58/2, Helios 44-2 58/2, Helios 44-M-4 58/2, Volna-3 80/2.8, Helios 40 85/1.5, Jupiter 9 85/2, Jupiter 11 135/4
Others: Chinon-Tomioka 55/1.4, Helios 28/2.8, Isco Iscotar 50/2.8, Konica Hexanon 40/1.8, Ludwig Meritar 50/2.9, Schacht Travegon 35/3.5, Schacht Travenon 135/4.5, Sekor 55/1.8, Sigma MF 28/2.8, S-Takumar, 28/3.5, S-Takumar 50/1.4, S-Takumar 55/1.8, S-Takumar 55/2, Steinheil Quinar 135/2.8, Steinheil Culminar 135/4.5, Vivitar 135/2.8, Voigtlander Ultron 50/1.8, Yashica Yashinon DX 50/1.4, Zuiko MC Auto-W 28/2.8
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
Rob Leslie
Joined: 20 Mar 2007 Posts: 1103 Location: UK Swindon
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 7:25 pm Post subject: Re: Theres digital and theres digital... |
|
|
Rob Leslie wrote:
DSG wrote: |
The problem with DSLR's using conventional Bayer/CFA sensors is that Bayer sensors cannot resolve detail to less than about 3 pixels in width or height.
DSLR's using Foveon X3 sensors on the other hand can resolve detail right down to a single pixel...This is what makes pics from Sigma cameras much more film-like than those from DSLR's from other brands. |
Could you show us an example of that. Perhaps a 20 inch print (300dpi) = 6144 x 4113 pixels Crop as I posted. _________________ Pentax K10D & K100D. Many Tamron Adaptall SP lenses, Fujinon f4.5 400mm. A loved Lens Baby 2, Lubitel triplet +++ and many film cameras. Mainly a Digital user inc G5, GR2
http://robstreet.blogspot.com/
http://robleslie.blogspot.com/
http://roblesliephotography.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/64956578@N00/ |
|
Back to top |
|
|
poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 7:42 pm Post subject: |
|
|
poilu wrote:
Rob wrote: |
Could you show us an example of that. Perhaps a 20 inch print (300dpi) = 6144 x 4113 pixels Crop as I posted |
the sample you posted have a real resolution of 3072x2056
try this experiment : size it by 50% then size by 200%
you will get the same pic that you posted
now take my sample and try the same, you will not read the text after
this will show you that my sample have a true resolution of 6144 x 4113 _________________ T* |
|
Back to top |
|
|
A G Photography
Joined: 11 May 2008 Posts: 1480 Location: Bologna - Italy
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 9:17 pm Post subject: |
|
|
A G Photography wrote:
I can confirm poilu results. I tried with a helios 44 on a bellow, a diffuse flash behind and a 120 velvia 50 slide and I could get a detail of that slide at 10 MP with film grain clearly visible. Impressive, I couldn't believe it.
It's not practical for 120 film because, unless you need a very small detail, the scanner will produce better results... until I will get that new 24 MP Sony
But for 135 film this is a great method, thanks poilu for showing me how to get it. I just have some rolls of 135 Velvia 50 in the fridge _________________ Alessandro
My Photography Website
My Blog about Photography and Italian Cuisine
My Photostream on Flickr
--------------------------------------------------------
DSLR: Nikon d80, Olympus e410
SLR: Chinon CX, Fujica ST605n, Nikon f601, Pentacon FM, Pentax Spotmatic SPII, Praktica FX, Praktica FX2, Voigtlander VST1, Yashica FX-3, Zeiss Contaflex
RF: Altissa Altix, Zorki Ie, Kiev 4b
Medium Format: Pentacon Six TL, Zeiss Ikonta 520/2, Mockba 4, Voigtlander Bessa I, Agfa Isolette II, Agfa Isola
Large Format: Cambo SC 4x5, Rodenstock Sinaron 150/5.6, Rodenstock Rodagon 150/5.6, Schneider Kreuznach Symmar 180/5.6
Lenses
Nikkors: 28/3.5 AIS, 35/2, 50/1.8, 50/2 H, Micro 55/3.5, Micro 60/2.8, 85/1.8, 135/3.5 AI, 200/4 NAI, 18-55/3.5-5.6, 28-80/3.5-5.6, 55-200/4-5.6
CY: Distagon 28/2.8, Planar 50/1.4, Yashika 50/1.7, Sonnar 135/2.8
CZJ m42-Exakta: Flektogon 20/4, Flektogon 35/2.8, Tessar 40/4.5, Tessar 50/2.8, Pancolar 50/1.8, Pancolar 50/2, Biotar 58/2, Biotar 75/1.5, Tessar 80/2.8, Sonnar 135/3.5, Sonnar 135/4, Triotar 135/4
CZJ P6: Flektogon 50/4, Flektogon 65/2.8, Biometar 80/2.8, Biometar 120/2.8, Sonnar 180/2.8
Meyer-Pentacon: Orestegon 29/2.8, Pentacon 29/2.8, Lydith 30/3.5, Primagon 35/4.5, Helioplan 40/4.5, Domiplan 50/2.8, Primotar 50/3.5, Oreston 50/1.8, Primoplan 58/1.9, Orestor 100/2.8, Trioplan 100/2.8, Helioplan 135/4.5, Orestor 135/2.8, Pentacon 135/2.8, Primotar 135/3.5, Primotar 180/3.5, Telemegor 180/5.5, Orestegor 200/4, Pentacon 200/4, Orestegor 300/4, Telemegor 300/4.5, Telemegor 400/5.5
Schneider-Kreuznach: Curtagon 28/4, Curtagon 35/2.8, Xenon 50/1.9, Xenar 50/2.8, Tele Xenar 135/3.5, Tele Xenar 200/4
Russians: Arsat Zodiak 30/3.5, Mir-I 37/2.8, Volna-9 50/2.8, Industar-50 50/3.5, Industar-61 50/2.8, Helios 44 58/2, Helios 44-2 58/2, Helios 44-M-4 58/2, Volna-3 80/2.8, Helios 40 85/1.5, Jupiter 9 85/2, Jupiter 11 135/4
Others: Chinon-Tomioka 55/1.4, Helios 28/2.8, Isco Iscotar 50/2.8, Konica Hexanon 40/1.8, Ludwig Meritar 50/2.9, Schacht Travegon 35/3.5, Schacht Travenon 135/4.5, Sekor 55/1.8, Sigma MF 28/2.8, S-Takumar, 28/3.5, S-Takumar 50/1.4, S-Takumar 55/1.8, S-Takumar 55/2, Steinheil Quinar 135/2.8, Steinheil Culminar 135/4.5, Vivitar 135/2.8, Voigtlander Ultron 50/1.8, Yashica Yashinon DX 50/1.4, Zuiko MC Auto-W 28/2.8
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
|