Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/12/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > However, Doug, sarcasm aside, personal experience or no, given that the > > ribbing is visible in the white hockey socks in both the film scan and > > the digital shot, the questions about those to shots that really do > > have > > to be answered relate to brightness and angle of illumination, etc., > > and > > not to "personal experience." > > That whole ribbing thing is f***ing ridiculous. Even if the damned > images weren't of two different fast-moving hockey players (whose knees > were presumably travelling at different speeds) shot on long lenses > under different lighting conditions (one considerably more angular than > the other), trying to judge a 11 MP camera, or indeed film, from an > jpeg image like that is beyond nuts. My dinky Nikon 5000 renders more > detail than that ribbing with ease. It "turns to mush" because you are > looking at it at 72 dpi on a compressed image, duh. The only way to > make comparisons is to go to 'actual pixels' level in uncompressed and > unsharpened versions of both the digital and the scanned image. > Otherwise you are just blowing smoke up each other's asses -- behaviour > which I might point out is not exactly unknown on this list, and > however pleasurable it may be for consenting participants does not add > to the sum of human knowledge. > > My own guess is that an 11 MP camera will blow any 200 ISO 35mm film > out of the water, and will look better than 100 ISO 35mm film at > anything less than 10x enlargement. I think those are conservative > estimates too. > > -- > John Brownlow Hey Johnny, might want to switch to decaf and lay off the salt ;-) Regards, Austin - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html