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So the comparisons of scanned film developer combos are useless to a darkroom printer?Apples and oranges, or exact duplicates, your choice.
So the comparisons of scanned film developer combos are useless to a darkroom printer?
Sure, but that is not what you asked. You asked how scans compare to darkroom prints. They don't. One does not exist in the physical realm and one does.So the comparisons of scanned film developer combos are useless to a darkroom printer?
I should have worded it, “how do scans viewed on an lcd look different from a silver gelatin print”.Sure, but that is not what you asked. You asked how scans compare to darkroom prints. They don't. One does not exist in the physical realm and one does.
A better comparison might be between a computer monitor image and a projected transparency. Both use transmitted light.I should have worded it, “how do scans viewed on an lcd look different from a silver gelatin print”.
A better comparison might be between a computer monitor image and a projected transparency. Both use transmitted light.
How can a scanned slide or negative be analog? It's digital.You should know, in your heart of hearts, IF the scanned images of film approximates what could be made in an analog print or faithfully represents the transparency scanned. If yes, I have no problem saying it's analog; if not, then it's hybrid.
I do not understand why you would shoot film, only to scan it and put it up on the web. If the final destination is digital, why wouldn't you take the picture with a digital camera? Seems like a nonsensical workflow to me.
I think it all depends .. It depends on what was used to make the image on the lcd and how hte sgp was made. I'm not sure how to word this but when I enlarge a negative onto paper sometimes i get a grainy print, when i scan and enlarge a file to be looked at on a screen ( the same size as the print ) it doesn't seem to have the same sort of grain.I should have worded it, “how do scans viewed on an lcd look different from a silver gelatin print”.
Okay - then make use of a back projection screen then!OK, this is splitting hairs and it's not all that important, but the computer monitor is transmitted and the slide is reflected light from a screen unless you directly view the slide itself...
True! Forgot about that method of presentation...Okay - then make use of a back projection screen then!
Well, my prints have a raised relief -- hard to get that look on a computer screen. Others have describe the significant differences between viewing light reflecting off the photographs' paper vs viewing light emitting imaging devises. Apples and oranges, like I said earlier -- or one can try to make them as similar as possible...whatever floats ones boat.I should have worded it, “how do scans viewed on an lcd look different from a silver gelatin print”.
You mean a digital representation of analog. You just can't admit to yourself that a scan is digital. Do you even actually make wet prints?OK, a good representation of analog; satisfied?
exactly!What you might be aiming at is that scanning negatives and analysing them can be a useful tool for determining how they will print on silver gelatin.
I'm not sure how to word this but when I enlarge a negative onto paper sometimes i get a grainy print, when i scan and enlarge a file to be looked at on a screen ( the same size as the print ) it doesn't seem to have the same sort of grain.
When I scanned a carbon print on a scanner, I was disappointed -- then I learned about to turning off the auto sharpening (Epson V850 or whatever). Might be an issue.Just yesterday I was more/less thinking about what the OP asked. I scanned a neg about week ago and immediately printed it on my cannon about 7" by 7". Looked grainy. Through a loop the neg didn't look grainy to me. ...
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