I was wondering at what level of enlargement you think you can see the advantage of medium format over 35mm?.
You scan 135 format and then join APUG to tell us how low quality the format is?.......unless I spend $100+ PER IMAGE on a sure resolution scan. It's just become too expensive for less result.......
Ok, let's go back to the original topic.....
35mm film is cool, but I don't think the "quality" is high compare to today's digital camera. It's true that 135 photography can be high quality, but it's very rare, and it's not the....
It's not nonsensical. What people usually mean by comparisons of quality are easily measured, quantifiable things like resolution and color fidelity. Resolution is pretty easy to measure, color accuracy only slightly more difficult.
Now which one actually looks better, well, that's a lot more subjective.
You scan 135 format and then join APUG to tell us how low quality the format is?
Lol! No I just mean that if we are talking of the advantages of Medium vs. 35mm, I'm saying the Medium is still higher resolution than 35mm digital images, where 35mm film can be beaten in the resolution arena between digital and film. And it's become cost prohibitive (at least for me) to spend about $100-$150 per image to have them scanned to the quality that would match the resolution of digital if I were printing large prints. I'm not saying I'm happy about it, if I could have my local lab scan my film at high rez for $2 per roll, it would be great but that's not the case, so IMHO the advantage of Medium format is that it can still beat out digital in the resolution arena, that's all, I still prefer film, but this is also a business and cost vs benefit is a factor for me.
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You scan 135 format and then join APUG to tell us how low quality the format is?
Lol! No I just mean that if we are talking of the advantages of Medium vs. 35mm, I'm saying the Medium is still higher resolution than 35mm digital images, where 35mm film can be beaten in the resolution arena between digital and film. And it's become cost prohibitive (at least for me) to spend about $100-$150 per image to have them scanned to the quality that would match the resolution of digital if I were printing large prints. I'm not saying I'm happy about it, if I could have my local lab scan my film at high rez for $2 per roll, it would be great but that's not the case, so IMHO the advantage of Medium format is that it can still beat out digital in the resolution arena, that's all, I still prefer film, but this is also a business and cost vs benefit is a factor for me....
I've been playing with some alternative films to see just how much detail you can get using the Mamiya 7 system. This followed on from the Big Camera Comparison
http://www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/12/big-camera-comparison/
.. that I ran last year. Well having read about Adox CMS 20 I thought I'd give it a go with the same target. The results were quite dramatic. Here's the big picture showing that the result is definitely 'pictorial' and not just a lith film (developed using the Adotech II developer recommended by Adox).
http://static.timparkin.co.uk/static/scans/cms20-full.jpg
Excuse the scratches - I wasn't particularly careful with this as I was only interested in a small section.
Well the film outresolved 4x5 delta 100 (oh, and trounced the IQ180 on the way there) and started on toward 10x8 - didn't get too close but it was definitely trying.
The amazing thing about the film that I was stunned by was the fact that it has almost zero grain and also no halation. To give you an idea of just how much detail it shows - you can read the engraving on the watch strap of my colleague Mark Banks..
Here's a comparison of various microscope shots and scans..
http://static.timparkin.co.uk/static/tmp/cms20-vs.jpg
Tim
Perhaps it makes more sense to simply compare strengths instead of trying to simply finding what is best.
Depending on your way of thinking, the "extra" depth of field you get in 35mm is either a benefit or a handicap. I tend to like shallower depth of field, so I don't like getting stuck shooting at f11-f22 in bright daylight because my film is so fast (relatively speaking) that I can't open up further. This is somewhat less of an issue with 35mm as my 35mm cameras all have blindingly fast shutter speeds (1/6000- 1/8000 top speed). But sometimes shooting with shutter speeds that fast you have other unintended consequences of motion frozen that you don't want to be frozen. It's all a series of trade-offs. My default, go-to camera of late is my Rolleiflex. But I have Contax 35mm SLR and rangefinder cameras, and then there are all the large format cameras when speed of operation is not an issue. It really comes down to "why use a hammer when you need a screwdriver" - pick the tool for the task, don't try to make the task fit the tool.
StoneNYC said:... but clients comment on how sharp xxxx is and how unsharp xxxx...
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