I'm going to take the same photo twice and develop with both Bellini and Cinestill to compare, as soon as my new (old) Apo Ronar 480mm f11 arrives!
This will be an interesting comparison.
I'm going to take the same photo twice and develop with both Bellini and Cinestill to compare, as soon as my new (old) Apo Ronar 480mm f11 arrives!
If it is multi-pass multi-scanning, then there is a chance that the CCD sensor is not in the exact same place on each pass. But I think this would show up as reduced sharpness and not the whole image being moved.
The slight move of the second pass I believe also accounts for the smoothing of the result when combined.
The end pic is acceptable, but i'm curious if a better result is possible without such extreme LR tweaks?
There is a theoretical advantage to multi-pass multi-scanning in that the longer period between scans could make it more likely that the noise pattern has changed and thus that the averaging of the multiple scans might be more effective in correcting for noise. But, this depends on having perfect positioning of the CCD sensor on each scan.
I think the single-pass multi-scanning is more likely on most scanners (that offer it) to provide high quality results, since the multiple samples are all taken on one pass of the CCD sensor, and so positioning errors are unlikely. But, the noise pattern might not have changed as much since each sample for any given location is taken in fairly close succession.
Aim for the sharpest and best exposed scan you can, but whatever the scanner software produces it will not substitute for Lightroom, your eye, or opinion. Scanning in B&W is similar, just get all the information out of the negative and adjust the brightness and contrast in post processing (and for colour the colour balance). It cuts out chasing your tail in trying to get a perfect scan and then you proudly sit back and look at it and realise it still isn't right so you end up tweaking in Lightroom anyway.
In my opinion there's much too much digital manipulation in modern photography. There's nothing wrong with it intrinsically, but people just don't know where to stop, it's like holding a magic wand and apparently it's so hard to just say "enough" and put it down.
In my opinion there's much too much digital manipulation in modern photography. There's nothing wrong with it intrinsically, but people just don't know where to stop, it's like holding a magic wand and apparently it's so hard to just say "enough" and put it down.
There isn't a pattern to black noise or readout noise of a CCD sensor. It's random. If there was a pattern to noise it could be (largely) eliminated without averaging.
Dazzer, are you accounting for bellows extension when you make your exposure? This is a common issue that can cause your images to be underexposed.
Sinar Booster 1 / Minolta Flash Meter IV!
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