No, and that wasn't the question. I was asking peoples' opinions on how big a 35mm print could be for viewing in domestic situations before the image was compromised. Those disadvantages can be intrusive grain, desaturation of colours, lack of sharpness, etc. If you're used to large format values, any 35mm print over 3 x 2" might look "wrong", but I'm working on the assumption that regular 35mm print makers have reached an optimal balance of technical quality and physical presence. I think around 12 x 9" is a working compromise over a variety of film types, lenses, subjects and lighting, but I was soliciting other views in the spirit of an internet forum.
Clearly there is no theoretical limit, and I have sat at the back of 2000 seat auditoriums in the days of slide presentations and viewed 36 x 24mm originals from 150ft away.
hi blockend:
will you be printing the images yourself? will they be color or black and white?
if you aren't printing them yourself will the lab be using an enlarger or laser ?
i've printed some large and some small off of 35mm film, large and small.
b/w enlarged by me, so the quality of the image depended on my skill with the enlarger
and interpretation of the film. 11x14 is really the main size i enlarged to but larger also looked good
nomatter how close you were, but to be honest, at a distance 11x14 is kind of small for across room viewing. color, i have never printed but labs have always done a good job with enlargements whether they were made from pigment big [ thanks elevator ! , thanks kerry ! , thanks imagekind !] or with a laser small, or large they always looked good, good enough to sell, good enough to have people write me and say how good they looked on their wall.
while large is nice, i am more fond of little images, it doesn't matter to me how small or large the negative might be miniature images have a draw to them that big ones lack. the photographer has a few things to juggle. the image-composition/design is magnified as it gets smaller in size and because the person viewing is so close the personal experience is magnified too. while i was sort of being goofy when i said 35mm contact prints -- i have some 35mm prints that aren't much bigger than that and they are just beautiful to look at.
but how big can you go really depends on what you hope for, what the image looks like big ( some don't "look good" big ) and depends on the skill of the person making the photograph. im blessed to have a great lab down the street. she's masterful at making large and small images, and doing her best. some labs are just so-so.
YMMV