6x7 and grain concerns?

Nymphaea's, triple exposure

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Nymphaea's, triple exposure

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Nymphaea

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Nymphaea

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Jekyll driftwood

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Jekyll driftwood

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It's also a verb.

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It's also a verb.

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Konical

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Good Evening,

Because the grain from a larger negative is less obvious than that of a 35mm negative, given a similar-size print and a similar film/developer combination, the print from MF will ordinarily exhibit much less graininess.

With a film such as Tri-X, 8 x 10 prints are too grainy for my taste, but those from MF are acceptable. But with a finer grained film, such as 35mm TMX, I find graininess in 8 x 10 prints very acceptable for most purposes; you'd have to go to at least 11 x 14 before noticing grain.

Tastes vary. What is acceptable to some may not be to others.

Konical
 

keithwms

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I tried to [vaguely, approximately] quantify the relative role of grain in different formats here...

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

Of course, experience is better than theoretical supposition....
 

edtbjon

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The less apparent grain is one thing. While e.g. Carl Zeiss and Mamaya lenses are very well reputed, MF lenses usually are less sharp and less contrasty than their 35mm counterparts. (Not to mention the dedicated digital lenses, which are very sharp and contrasty.) On the other hand you will notice a much smoother tonality. The pictures may seem a bit sharper but at the same time they are much smoother. I think that is the greatest gain in the larger sized negatives. (Which is why I refer my Hassy SWC to being my "pocket camera". :smile: I personally "max out" with some old brass lenses on a 5x7" Sinar.)

//Björn
 

Chazzy

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It's simply a truism that a larger format means less magnification (for the same size print), and that less magnification means less apparently grain. I recently experimented with Kodak's Portra NC 400 in 6x7, and was stunned to see how grainless it is. I hadn't used any color film to speak of for a very long time, and was unaware just how much the color emulsions have improved. I'm about to try the VC version, just to see what that is like and how it compares. The smoothness of medium format and large format works very well for people photography, in my opinion. If I gave a damn about landscapes, I would probably also prefer the larger formats for their ability to render detail.
 
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