pradheep thavamani
Member
Can I scan 6x7 negatives for 30x40 print size on V850? If yes how is the quality? Please share your experience
30x40 inches or cm?
Sorry, V850 will NOT scan at such a resolution. Might as well pencil draw a copy of needed negative. Kidding aside, scanning outside of drum scanning is far below that level. Which is not to say 6x7 won't scan finely enough (on V850) to get 30x40 inches, although it may be stretching it for some critically acclaimed pixel peeping evaluations of the final print. Just duck the critics if they disapprove.so your scanner will scan at 6400x9600 dpi and is capable of scanning a film negative all the way up to 8x10". 6400dpi/300dpi = 21 inches 9600/300dpi=32". So at maximum resolution you should be able to print a 21"x32" print (53cmx81cm) using 300dpi for printing.
https://www.google.com/search?q=v850+epson+maximum+scan+size
There are likely some limitations to this calculation but I would think you should be good to go.
Epson scanning
I'm linking above video even though it is not the one I was after There is a guy on the tube who did Joshua Tree on Mamiya RB67 then scanned on an Epson V.... one of those 700-850 (in his own way, taping negative to anti-reflection glass) then printed large but am not sure if that was 30x40 or smaller.
Try this oneOMG! That is the most incredible image of Joshua Tree I've ever seen!![]()
Can I scan 6x7 negatives for 30x40 print size on V850? If yes how is the quality? Please share your experience
You aren't missing anything. My math was off. I was calculating the maximum theoretical printable image, not the actual target film size. I also failed to account for the fact that the 21 was the number of 300dpi images that could be printed from a single 6400 dpi scanned image inch. My bad. Obviously didn't have my coffee that day.That math doesn't work. 6400dpi optical resolution is about 250 dpmm. Assuming a full resolution scan of a full 60mm X 70mm negative, the resulting image would be 15000 x 17500 dots. Printing at 300 dpi would net a print 50 inches X 58.33 inches. What am I missing?
I don't think comparing screen view to actual print makes sense or is indicative of final result. Perhaps with some serious experience for a specific screen/printing process it eventually might produce something predictable, but print is a reflective medium, screen is transmission medium, not even remotely close to be compared.I've been wondering the same thing. (Epson 4990.)
I'm still learning and have been repeatedly scanning the same 6x6 neg to try out different settings. Best so far is just over 10k x 10k pixels but the focus could be better imo, it looks a lot sharper on the lightbox.
I'm thinking that the best way to evaluate a scan for printing big is to enlarge the screen image and see how much detail is there. When viewing as a 6" x 6" on screen image it would print ok at that size imo. I zoomed until the image is 12" wide on screen and it doesn't look sharp.
I'm hoping that I can get the focus better but I want to get to grips with the rest of the settings first.
I know nothing about all this math stuff but this is what I have actually done. I have scanned a 4x5 neg at 2400dpi and made a stunningly sharp volour print that is 30x40 inches. I used an Epson 750 Pro.
so your scanner will scan at 6400x9600 dpi and is capable of scanning a film negative all the way up to 8x10". 6400dpi/300dpi = 21 inches 9600/300dpi=32". So at maximum resolution you should be able to print a 21"x32" print (53cmx81cm) using 300dpi for printing.
https://www.google.com/search?q=v850+epson+maximum+scan+size
There are likely some limitations to this calculation but I would think you should be good to go.
None of it works like this. Print is reflective, screen is transmissive.Get to know your screen resolution, on my monitor it’s 96 ppi.
Make a copy of your scan and resize it to 96? ppi x the inches you are going to print using lightroom or photoshop for example (don’t save this over your master file!)
Look at your screen at 100% and you see the image real size as the print would be or part of it at least.
How does it look? sharp or soft ? Consider the viewing distance for a print this size.
This should be close enough to evaluate how it would look printed at this size.
I entirely disagree with this. One may be able to learn how to compensate for the huge difference in display characteristics, but they will not even close look same enough. i am purely referring to visual final experience and not whether one can see a difference between two scans on screen when in the end both are meant for wall display. It is what they look like on that wall that matters.Reflective or not the detail is going to look about same at the same, thats what Im looking at. How well does the image hold up at that enlargement.
epson quotes the specs as below:I do not know what the V850's actual optical resolution limits are, but I am confident that they are significantly less than 6400 ppi (pixels per inch).
More likely something around 1800-2400 ppi.
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I guarantee that those numbers are theoretical, not actual.epson quotes the specs as below:
https://epson.ca/For-Work/Scanners/...erfection-V850-Pro-Photo-Scanner/p/B11B224201
you'll have to click the "specifications" tab
Optical Resolution:
- Epson Dual Lens System
- 4800 dpi and 6400 dpi
I guarantee that those numbers are theoretical, not actual.
This site, for example, says that the actual, maximum effective resolution for the predecessor V800 using their standard methodology is 2300 ppi, and the result is the same whether the software is set to 4800 or 6400: https://www.filmscanner.info/en/EpsonPerfectionV800Photo.html
As that report indicates, all the extra glass in a flatbed scanner gets in the way.
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