ymc226
Member
I am changing to digital full frame sensored camera for 135 format and keeping my MF 120 film cameras, shoot 100% B&W (Neopan in Xtol replenished); developed and printed in my own darkroom using fiber based paper and like the results but finding it is harder and harder to dedicate the time to set up, print/develop and clean up.
I have an Epson 3880, added Imageprint 9 RIP, use LR 4 (no Photoshop yet) and also a wide gamut NEC monitor to optimize my digital post-processing work flow which would have prints as the final product. I don't post pictures on the web or review on a monitor.
Compared to a completely digitally acquired and proccessed monochrome image printed via the injet, are there advantages to using a scanned 120 format negative that would be printed digitally? Is there more dynamic range in the scanned larger negative? Can you manipulate the contrast, exposure, highlights/shadows as much with a scanned file?
I am asking as there are rumblings of a new 120 scanner from Plustek and I don't want to give up on film especially if there are quality advantages with a hybrid process.
I have an Epson 3880, added Imageprint 9 RIP, use LR 4 (no Photoshop yet) and also a wide gamut NEC monitor to optimize my digital post-processing work flow which would have prints as the final product. I don't post pictures on the web or review on a monitor.
Compared to a completely digitally acquired and proccessed monochrome image printed via the injet, are there advantages to using a scanned 120 format negative that would be printed digitally? Is there more dynamic range in the scanned larger negative? Can you manipulate the contrast, exposure, highlights/shadows as much with a scanned file?
I am asking as there are rumblings of a new 120 scanner from Plustek and I don't want to give up on film especially if there are quality advantages with a hybrid process.