Photo Engineer
Subscriber
All grains in all films are randomly distributed unless packed shoulder to shoulder which is impossible to achieve.
PE
PE
I know your background, highly respect your inside opinion and mostly agree with it (never cared for pixel peeping either). Still, it flies in the face of all these digital folks screaming for dozens of mega pixels, because "they need all the resolution they can get". It's not just clueless amateurs but capable pros who claim they can't do full body portraits with less than 20MP.The problem is that there is little ROI on these very very slow films. The market is tiny.
But, more specifically, most MP color print films run in the range of 0.2 microns and are monodispersed. They have an ISO ranging from 25 - 100 depending on layer, and are fast due to the sophisticated sensitizing capabilities of the major film producers. These can be enlarged to auditorium sizes.
Sorry to say, it will not be analogue.
It is probably not less random as that is not possible due to the limitations of the coating process. As for fineness of grain, what is their definition. Kodak, Agfa, Ilford and Fuji all can make grains in sizes less than 0.2 microns. The problem is that there is little ROI on these very very slow films. The market is tiny.
But, more specifically, most MP color print films run in the range of 0.2 microns and are monodispersed. They have an ISO ranging from 25 - 100 depending on layer, and are fast due to the sophisticated sensitizing capabilities of the major film producers. These can be enlarged to auditorium sizes.
PE
PE, is there any practical way to develop these films? They all use a backing don't they? Different chemical process?
Sorry. I am typing on my iPhone and made the question too brief. I was simply asking if MP film can be shot in a 35mm camera in a convenient way. From my memory it has a remjet backing and a different chemical process than C-41. Is this correct?
To answer a few questions....
If you photograph a neutral density scale and enlarge it then read it, you will get some measure of granularity which can be loosely defined as the variation in density over a given area of space. It is the reverse of taking the small image and reading it with a microdensitometer. So, you do not need a microscope at all. All you need to do is magnify an image and measure density fluctuations in a straight line across the surface of a print. The root mean square of this fluctuation might be considered the grain at that density. Doing it repeatedly over all densities and then plotting the resultant RMS values will give you "RMS Granularity" of the film as a function of density or exposure.
As for motion picture films, Mike is partially correct. Color Motion Picture films are the finest grained of all color negative and print films. The fineness of grain and resolution are astounding. But, nothing is perfect. In fact, there is a minimum value for grain due to noise. You can cast a pure grainless dye on transparent support, and it will yield a finite value for RMSG due to the noise in the measuring system.
PE
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