Europan
Member
According to the optical laws resolving power increases with the opening. https://www.asprs.org/wp-content/uploads/pers/1947journal/mar/1947_mar_64-85.pdf
There is no useful rule of thumb.
According to the optical laws resolving power increases with the opening. https://www.asprs.org/wp-content/uploads/pers/1947journal/mar/1947_mar_64-85.pdf
please note: resolution ismeasuredin 'lp'(line pairs)/mm not'l'(lines)/mm; just sayin...That might be true and that's a lot to swallow right that article.
Thank you! Taken together with this - I figure that in reality I should focus on the inherent contrast in the scene and camera shake to saturate them "mere" 160l/mm films. Let alone 260+
Just did some measurements and my projection setup is:
> Meridian PC 45mm f/2.8 MC lens
> 42mm image diagonal of Gepe 7013 Slide mount with metal mask
> ~2,5m throw distance (measured from slide) that projects ~2,13m diagonally. This gives me what, ~59x magnification right?
> 2,2m viewing distance. Measurements are approximate.
It would also be nice to know exactly what this projection lens can do - is it a limiting factor in this quest for sharper 1,20x1,8m projection or not? Guess I can ignore these figures in the future for sure
Thanks!
That's what I got from links above too, thanks!
Noted.please note: resolution ismeasuredin 'lp'(line pairs)/mm not'l'(lines)/mm; just sayin...
Agreed. But in practical terms - medium format projection is both - more dead and more expensive in every step of it, but the acquired results - not that impressive to justify all the expense and sourcing of pretty much alien projectors and glass slide mounts. Especially in a world where Gepe discontinued their more popular/demanded 7013 mounts I'm preaching. Inaccessible for me.It's not just the lens. Shoot a larger format of film and you won't have to enlarge as much.
And that's quoted elsewhere too. Now I know to play around the range of 4-8 and see what I like best. Oh, and you might want to check your signature - flickr is missing its comRule of thumb film days was best aperture was 2-3 stops down from wide open.
Rule of thumb film days was best aperture was 2-3 stops down from wide open.
Interesting thread. Nice to have a refresher course on mythology. Lots of generalizations and stereotypes. Very few specifics. Let's see, what did I do yesterday when I wanted some serious resolution yet a fast operating camera? Left the Nikon home and simply grabbed my Fuji 6X9 RF instead. No math needed.
Photo books in the 1960s and 1970s advised to close down a lens about two stops from its largest aperture - so my f/3.5 lenses were at their best at f/5/6 and so on - but all my 'phot lit' from that era is long gone and I don't recall any of the technical explanations for this. Maybe someone of my same vintage could explain it better than I can.
On the other end of the spectrum, I seem to remember something called the "Rule of 4". Dividing the focal length of the lens by 4 would give you the point at which diffraction may become an overriding problem. Anyone else ever hear of that? I believe it is based on the fact that it is the point at which the effective aperture is 4mm and there was a thing about apertures smaller than 4mm.
Ian - I once used Efke 25 in 6X9 roll film backs for my 4x5 camera in order to get reasonably good 16X20-ish prints which wouldn't be embarrassed by being in the same portfolio box as prints made from 4x5 or 8x10 film. That's a hard task for any medium format film. No way on earth any kind of far smaller 35mm film is going to fill that bill. In terms of quality, large format provides all kinds of opportunities over smaller formats because one does not need to be as worried about grain per se. Ekfe 25 wasn't exactly versatile, and was slow, but while it was still around did provide the unique combination of a very long scale with high acutance. My lenses were fully equal to the task. But toward the end of Efke, serious quality control issues began showing up. Yes, you could get that kind of detail with Pan F, but nowhere near the contrast range.
For example, I remember when Kodak was initially advertising Tech Pan as "4x5 quality from 35mm film". Well, I guess if you went out and found the grainiest old sheet film on the market, had a very sloppy camera and filmholder, along with a marginal quality lens, and didn't know how to use any of that well .... maybe. But I happen to have 8X10 sheets of Tech Pan itself still on hand. Does that mean I can get "32X40 inch film quality" from a mere 8x10 camera? Ludicrous thinking. The tonality of Tech Pan was miserable anyway. It was a forensic and copy film to begin with. Quality has more than one connotation. One has to set priorities of what that means to them personally.
There is no useful rule of thumb.
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