BetterSense
Member
This is not a question for casual speculation but a technical question for those who might have information deeper than that found in film datasheets.
Are there quantitative methods of describing grain? How do they work? What criteria are they based on?
What is the approximate functional relationship between graininess and film speed? Is graininess proportional to speed, proportional to the square root of speed, etc? I am very interested in this relationship for normal film illuminances, and including behavior at the extremes of speed.
What I'm getting at with this question:
Suppose we define a graininess scale such that a graininess of 0.5N enlarged 2X looks the same as a graininess of N at 1X.
If N is proportional to ISO speed for normal film illuminances, then it would mean that smaller formats would/could be less grainy than larger ones. If you cut the linear negative size in half, you double the effective graininess N, but you also boost the speed by 4x. If you then choose a film 2 stops slower, then you will end up with a result with the same speed as you started but half the graininess.
If N were proportional to the square root of ISO speed, then all formats could be similar in their graininess. This is why I'm interested in the functional relationship between ISO speed and graininess.
Are there quantitative methods of describing grain? How do they work? What criteria are they based on?
What is the approximate functional relationship between graininess and film speed? Is graininess proportional to speed, proportional to the square root of speed, etc? I am very interested in this relationship for normal film illuminances, and including behavior at the extremes of speed.
What I'm getting at with this question:
Suppose we define a graininess scale such that a graininess of 0.5N enlarged 2X looks the same as a graininess of N at 1X.
If N is proportional to ISO speed for normal film illuminances, then it would mean that smaller formats would/could be less grainy than larger ones. If you cut the linear negative size in half, you double the effective graininess N, but you also boost the speed by 4x. If you then choose a film 2 stops slower, then you will end up with a result with the same speed as you started but half the graininess.
If N were proportional to the square root of ISO speed, then all formats could be similar in their graininess. This is why I'm interested in the functional relationship between ISO speed and graininess.