- Joined
- Jul 18, 2006
- Messages
- 5
- Format
- ULarge Format
I'm completing re-machining/modifications to a 1950's era 35mm 'stereo' camera. It will produce a 35mm film negative 24x96mm. It would be nice to wind up with some 5x prints. A local lab can process color film, generate digital negative, and then produce up to 10x enlargements/prints.
I would be after a print, say, of around 5" x 19" - and I'm brand-new to digital.
Assuming my image is sharply focused and made with an adequately sharp lens, what might I expect from a 5x print generated from a 24x96mm camera negative?
In strictly analog we always talked about a certain size negative being able to "stand up" to ONLY a certain size print enlargement.
What things are exploitable from my (relatively small) camera negative considering I am printing via digitally-produced negative? To what extent, if any, can digital negative/scanning technology overcome the inherent problem of the fact of an enlargement's essentially magnifying its corresponding negative's grain? Am I asking for the moon?
Thanks in advance for comments and feedback!!
I would be after a print, say, of around 5" x 19" - and I'm brand-new to digital.
Assuming my image is sharply focused and made with an adequately sharp lens, what might I expect from a 5x print generated from a 24x96mm camera negative?
In strictly analog we always talked about a certain size negative being able to "stand up" to ONLY a certain size print enlargement.
What things are exploitable from my (relatively small) camera negative considering I am printing via digitally-produced negative? To what extent, if any, can digital negative/scanning technology overcome the inherent problem of the fact of an enlargement's essentially magnifying its corresponding negative's grain? Am I asking for the moon?
Thanks in advance for comments and feedback!!
