+1 - I wonder when it will be available?
It was said that samples will be handed out at this photokina. You can order them at fotoimpex as well. Film and developer are marked as being on stock.
+1 - I wonder when it will be available?
The pixel game can become meaningless as lens resolution becomes a factor. A very good general purpose lens will only resolve 120 lines per mm for a high contrast subject. Most resolve less. For a 24X36 sensor, that's only 2880X4320, or 12.4 megapixels. The combination of film and lens usually only gets you about 80 lines per mm, maybe 95 with the best equipment and common film.
This test seems to be more in line with my experience:
http://www.filmscanner.info/en/NikonSuperCoolscan5000ED.html
browse down to "Image quality", the author arrives to a resolution of 4100 dpi (should be ppi) horizontal and 3650 vertical, averaging to a value of around 3900 ppi. That should be above 70 lp/mm and closer to 80 lp/mm.
In any case it is very interesting to see that the scanner is the weak link in this chain. Future desktop scanners might be able to extract even more details from our slides.
Fabrizio
Henning, that Ektar comparison bothers me. I know that this film was designed to maximize sharpness and grain and the fact that it shows poorly in your example just does not match up with other information.
Any thoughts?
PE
Don't waste your time waiting for better scanners for slides.
The method for highest performance with slides is already existent: Slide projection!
It was said that samples will be handed out at this photokina. You can order them at fotoimpex as well. Film and developer are marked as being on stock.
Lens resolution cannot evolve at the
same pace as sensors, ...
and all those DLSR's etc cannot compete with basic ancient movements provided by LF cameras. Tilt/shift lenses might be OK for some things, but overall, are a pretty poor
substitute.
If you want to venture into LF quality, then figure out all the above, esp a lens with fifty
times more resolution, not two times more!
That was one of the most interesting parts of your post. When analogue is compared to digital the comparison is always performed on the digital playing field, i.e. converting analogue to digital (by scanning) and comparing the results.
I know the direction of the OP was for improvements or innovations to commercial film, but I'll throw my take on the subject into the hat. (Those of you who already know what I'm going to say -- no groans please)
I think a significant part of the future of film is R&D in the home darkroom, with the goal of making diy film, plates, and paper as easy and satisfactory and accepted as other alternative processes have become.
d
I have been enjoying reading this thread that I started. I'm learning a lot, even though the conversation has gone away from the topic.
Henning, thanks a lot for the inside view. Is it valid to assume that this kind of R&D include benefits for either slide or negative film or can that be excluded? I am not very familiar with paper technology concerning how it corresponds to film technology.
Christian
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