alanrockwood
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- Oct 11, 2006
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I had another look at Adrians 410 files. One is labeled as a 8 bit scan. The other is labeled as a 16 bit scan. However, when I read them into photoline they are both identified as 16 bit images. At first this caused be to give up on looking at those. However, then it occurred to me that the one labeled as an 8 bit file might have actually been scanned in 8 bit and then converted to 16 bit. In other words, possibly Adrian decided to do the first step in the workflow I have been advocation, i.e. converting an 8 bit file to 1 bit before doing any other operations of the file, so I proceeded on that basis.
I read both files into photoline. Then I adjusted the contrast using the histogram tool. I did this in a series of steps, adjusting the histogram limits to try to keep the contrast in the two files as close to each other as possible. Eventually I was able to pretty well isolate the high step numbers with contrasts that were usable. I was not able to perfectly match the contrast in the two images, but I think I got them pretty close.
Here are the images. The first one is the one identified as 16 bit. The second is the one identified as 8 bit.
In my opinion, for the 16 bit image I think I could say that step #35 can be barely distinguished from the step on the left and the step on the right. Arguably one might bump it to step #36. For the 8 bit image I would say that step #36 can be just barely distinguished from the steps to the left and right.
This would indicate that the 8 bit scan just barely edges out the 16 bit scan as having higher dynamic range by maybe half a step. However, the two are so close that I would say it's a virtual tie. In any case, there is no indication that the 16 bit result has higher dynamic range. Even if one were to fudge the results and give the award to the 16 bit scan by one step, that would amount to only 0.1 density unit, which on a linear scale would mean that the 16 bit scan would have 26% more dynamic range. This is such a small difference that, even if true, it would be lost in the experimental uncertainty.
As a final comment, I'm sure that everyone noticed that the step images here do not look like good bar-shaped steps. I think this probably means that the Epson scanner that Adrian used is not very good at pulling out information from dense parts of the negative. That's to bad because I have a similar scanner (an Epson V/750), and I would be pleased if these scanners would do a little better.
I read both files into photoline. Then I adjusted the contrast using the histogram tool. I did this in a series of steps, adjusting the histogram limits to try to keep the contrast in the two files as close to each other as possible. Eventually I was able to pretty well isolate the high step numbers with contrasts that were usable. I was not able to perfectly match the contrast in the two images, but I think I got them pretty close.
Here are the images. The first one is the one identified as 16 bit. The second is the one identified as 8 bit.
In my opinion, for the 16 bit image I think I could say that step #35 can be barely distinguished from the step on the left and the step on the right. Arguably one might bump it to step #36. For the 8 bit image I would say that step #36 can be just barely distinguished from the steps to the left and right.
This would indicate that the 8 bit scan just barely edges out the 16 bit scan as having higher dynamic range by maybe half a step. However, the two are so close that I would say it's a virtual tie. In any case, there is no indication that the 16 bit result has higher dynamic range. Even if one were to fudge the results and give the award to the 16 bit scan by one step, that would amount to only 0.1 density unit, which on a linear scale would mean that the 16 bit scan would have 26% more dynamic range. This is such a small difference that, even if true, it would be lost in the experimental uncertainty.
As a final comment, I'm sure that everyone noticed that the step images here do not look like good bar-shaped steps. I think this probably means that the Epson scanner that Adrian used is not very good at pulling out information from dense parts of the negative. That's to bad because I have a similar scanner (an Epson V/750), and I would be pleased if these scanners would do a little better.
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