scanned with a good scanner
So the grain is due to the fact that the scanner used to scan the image wasn't able to pick up as much detail as it should - or was it the fact that the print being scanned wasn't very large?
(Unless by 35mm Film scan you meant that the negatives were scanned)
I read on wikipedia that with an excellent lens, high quality 35mm film could capture the equivalent of 22 megapixels per exposure. So theoretically if you get a large print and a high quality scanner, you should be able to transfer your images quite crisply?
Some really fantastic images here.
This is one of my latest. Taken at St Andrew's, in Scotland.
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HDR From Single RAW Image.
David
Whats the chance of doing an HDR using 4x5" film.
Thinking of getting a 4x5 camera. When I visit the galleries, them prints are huge, colorful, and so clear.
So the grain is due to the fact that the scanner used to scan the image wasn't able to pick up as much detail as it should - or was it the fact that the print being scanned wasn't very large?
(Unless by 35mm Film scan you meant that the negatives were scanned)
I read on wikipedia that with an excellent lens, high quality 35mm film could capture the equivalent of 22 megapixels per exposure. So theoretically if you get a large print and a high quality scanner, you should be able to transfer your images quite crisply?
Thats pretty damn good!
One handheld RAW // HDR // Shutter: 1/80 // Aperture: f/16 // Focal Length: 17 mm // ISO 100
I have a dilemma. It ain't often that I feel a photo works well in both B&W and colour, but I'm stuck with this one and the colour version I posted yesterday:
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