hchapman
Member
A note to those using flatbed scanner measurements to derive correction curves for your negatives. Ive obtained non-linear results when using an Epson V700 scanner to measure a calibrated Stouffer 21 step reflectance step wedge (Stouffer #R2110C). When the step wedge was measured with an Eye One spectrophotometer the measured density readings matched the reference densities very well. When the step wedge was measured with the scanner the results were markedly different. The scan was performed as gray scale with all input/output controls set to 0/255. The scanned file was read in photoshop after using levels to set the black step to max black and white step to max white. Nearly identical results were obtained from this scanner using the stock scanner profile and a new scanner profile prepared using the Eye One. I also checked a friend's V700 using the Stouffer step wedge and got similar results. Both scanners function normally for general scanning purposes.
When the scanner is used to prepare a correction curve that, applied to a step wedge and printed, reads as linear with the scanner, the same print read with the Eye One shows a curve that looks like the inverse of the curve from reading the Stouffer step wedge with the scanner. If one's calibration standard for linearity is the Stouffer wedge, prints prepared using V700 scanner-derived curves may not be linear. For what it is worth, which may not be much.
I've seen instructions for using scanners to prepare profiles and curves for print linearization on this forum, in the "Digital Black and White - The Print" forum, and from other sources. I'm curious if my results have been observed by others and if they are relevant to preparing negatives.
Graphs of readings from the Stouffer step wedge with the scanner and Eye One are attached.
-Harlan
When the scanner is used to prepare a correction curve that, applied to a step wedge and printed, reads as linear with the scanner, the same print read with the Eye One shows a curve that looks like the inverse of the curve from reading the Stouffer step wedge with the scanner. If one's calibration standard for linearity is the Stouffer wedge, prints prepared using V700 scanner-derived curves may not be linear. For what it is worth, which may not be much.
I've seen instructions for using scanners to prepare profiles and curves for print linearization on this forum, in the "Digital Black and White - The Print" forum, and from other sources. I'm curious if my results have been observed by others and if they are relevant to preparing negatives.
Graphs of readings from the Stouffer step wedge with the scanner and Eye One are attached.
-Harlan