Koen Van Crombrugghe
Member
Film, like paper, has its limits. A scene can have far more dynamic range than a film can handle but careful manipulation can bring compress that range to fit that of the film. (ever heard or pushing or pulling?)
All film base has optical density. The chemistry used to process the film increases this density with no exposure to the film. This is called Film Base + fog.
Any scanner regardless of software used and any editing software has a histogram. The base line of the histogram is film base plus fog labeled fb+f. A histogram is a graphical representation of the information contained in the scanned material.
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0 on the histogram is pure black and at base line is no detail or in wet printing is paper black; 255 is pure white and at base line is no detail or in wet printing paper white. The dynamic range of the film or paper in use is irrelevant to these two points. Information contained on the scanned medium is registered above the base line. A perfectly exposed and developed negative with scene detail that fills the range of the film will have the blacks starting at 0 with the whites ending at 255.
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A over exposed but correctly developed negative will have information above the base line at 0 which cannot be retrieved in either scanning or wet printing.
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A over exposed over developed negative will have information above the base line at both 0 and 255 which is detail lost and not retrievable by any means.
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Another way to state this is the exposure is set so that the deepest blacks are just above the start of the toe of the film and the development is such that the highlights end just before the shoulder of the film. Exposure that extends the scene dynamic range into the toe of the film is lost detail from the scene and development that puts the highlights into the shoulder of the film is also lost information. I have yet to see a negative whose detail put the peak of the information between the toe, histogram 0, and the shoulder, histogram 255, beyond the height of the histogram but one may exist and that peak of information will likely not be loss of detail.
Repeating, any negative whose deepest blacks are just above the toe of the film and whose highlights are just before the shoulder of the film will wet print well (not perfect) at paper black and will scan well on any scanner or scanning software.
I fully agree that completely filling the histogram with scene detail is the optimal result.
We just need to be careful that the scanning software is not tricking us and showing a histogram after some internal shifting and scaling which will impact the actual number of levels we are capturing.
For this reason I like to use Vuescan as the 'graph raw' histogram function will show the histogram directly as the data comes out of the sensor, without any adjustments applied.
I'm not so sure about your last statement; the location of the shoulder in film density depends heavily on the development.
If you look at this graph which I posted above you'll see that none of the three proposed curves show any real shoulder at all within the displayed range (well maybe a bit on the 6'):
But the density of the 11' curve goes well above 3, even when subtracting the fb+fog, so well above what my scanner (and I believe most paper) is able to handle.