..PS about processing.
No processing - except of course for scaling.
The scanned photograph is however, a more subjective matter, since the
scanner will interpret the colours and exposure according to the settings I
choose. And then there is the option to scan at higher resolutions. In my
experience there is no point in scanning 35mm negs to higher resolutions
than 600-1200 ppi (using the EPSON) - the results will just get muddy and
grainy - there is not much more to get from the negs - not from the amateur
films (Superia etc.) that I normally use. Maybe it's different with very
sharp, fine grained, high definition films like Reala, Velvia or Impressa.
Or a better scanner.

Having said all this, I want to emphasize the point of resolution. I have
enlarged the red logo on the bicycle from both photographs. At enlargements
so big the logo fills the computer screen - there is a clear difference: The
red square looks like a blurry red finger print (finger paint) from the SONY
shot. The Pnetax shot still looks like at red logo with clearly definded
contours. I have even tried to interpolate the SONY shot to get more pixels.
This does not help much. The analog picture remains much better at large
enlargements.

So if you want a big print on a wall (like a projected slide at 50-100 times
enlargemnets - i.e. 120x180cm) the analog photograph will perform MUCH
better. Likewise for group photographs, where resolution i crucial.
If you want prints in, let's say A4-A3 size, a digital camera will do a
better job (sharper, more DOF).
So for most everyday photographs/prints, digital is the better choise. This
is all provided that the prints are made from scans - not photographicly.
That is, of course, just my (present and humble) opinion.

Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Brian Walters [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 25. maj 2004 01:47
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: Take a wild guess


Hi Jens

Well - eyerone else seems to think that the p4681284.html is the digital and
who
am I to disagree?  The second photo doesn't seem to have the same amount of
definition as the first which suggests it's been subject to more processing.

Out of curiousity, what's your opinion of the Epson for scanning negatives
and
slides?

Regards

Brian


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Brian Walters
Western Sydney, Australia



On Mon, 24 May 2004 18:44 , 'Jens Bladt' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> sent:

>I took the same photograph twice:
>One of the photographs was shot with Pentax MZ-S and SMC FA 1.4/50mm on 200
>ASA Fuji Superia, scanned on EPSON PERFECTION 3200 PHOTO. The other was
shot
>with SONY DSC F717 at 200 ASA.
>
>Which one was made with a PENTAX?
>
>http://gallery46369.fotopic.net/p4681284.html
>http://gallery46369.fotopic.net/p4681285.html
>
>Jens Bladt



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