If you drum scan your 35mm neg (thus avoiding lens degradation and flatness issues in the enlarging phase) then you can push to 11x14 with b&w for sure, and a good bit further with slides. Bear in mind that there are people like Galen Rowell who made a pretty good living on colour slides pushed to the max. His gear was nothing heroic- typically Nikon F5 or F100 and Nikkor lenses. The main point was that he shot colour slide almost exclusively. The limits of what 35mm b&w can do are considerably more modest, IMHO.
ya, i was reading about him the other day and his typical pack included an F100 (or equivalent in earlier days), 20mm lens, and 70-180 zoom. of course, when you do as much high-altitude, high-stress, high-risk adventure as he does, you're going to want to carry as modest of a load as possible.
Dunno about "high risk adventure" in reference to Rowell
didn't he claim first ascents of several peaks around the world? he was very much of a mountaineer, IIRC.
His best book I think was "Mount Light", but I can find no copy of it anywhere.
Okay I guess this just about says it all about GR...
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51FvA1WatLL._SS500_.jpg
3 points of contact with the rock, one hand for the camera....
There is a relationship between grain and apparent sharpness. Barry Thornton in his book Edge of Darkness did tests that showed that a little grain was necessary for the viewer to perceive prints as sharp. He compared enlargements using various films. The fine grain enlargements suffered with respect to sharpness compared with medium speed films at the same magnification.
This came up for me a while ago when I started using a 6x7 camera. I found that the fine grain developer I used gave underwhelming results to me with certain films like Acros, but I got nice results I liked with delta 3200 at the same enlargement. The thread is here if you are interested:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
My conclusion was that I needed to use a different developer (not as fine a grained one on the slower films). I also suspect that this is a highly personal perspective and different viewers like to see different things when they look at a big print.
Okay I guess this just about says it all about GR...
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51FvA1WatLL._SS500_.jpg
3 points of contact with the rock, one hand for the camera....
[...]I believe the most important link in the image forming chain is the solidity of your tripod. Your tripod technique is even more important than having the very finest lens in my opinion.
i was just wondering what you guys typically consider the limit of enlarging 35mm film. i've noticed softness on my prints starting at 8"x10", but that's what i get for examining my prints with a loupe.
consumer 400 asa color film looks like crap at 8x10 when enlarged optically.
... as long as the image's strength is not in it's detail the prints look great ...
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