Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/10/16

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Anyone been using the DiMAGE 5400?
From: Jerry Lehrer <jerryleh@pacbell.net>
Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:07:00 -0700
References: <BBB41BA9.2894%jzietz@lsu.edu>

Jim

Hmmm?  4096 shades of gray!  Has anyone heard of  "Forty Shades
Of Green"?

Jerry



Jim Zietz wrote:

> A scanner, like the Nikon 8000 or Minolta 5400, typically scans at a minimum
> of 12-bits, or two to the twelfth power which is 4096 shades of gray per
> color. In an 8-bit space you only have 256 (two to the eighth power) shades
> of gray, which is enough to fool the eye and brain into believing that it is
> seeing an even transition from black to white. An RGB color image is made up
> of three grayscale channels.
>
> If you start doing extensive editing, you start dropping out a bunch of
> those 256 shades of gray and you get banding or posterization. Other digital
> artifacts also come into play.
>
> So it is best to do the bulk of your editing in the scanning software, and
> get the best 8 bits of information into Photoshop's  8-bit space. Lasersoft
> SilverFast is a good scanning program because of the control you get and the
> feedback with the histogram. The newer NikonScan plug-in works well for me
> too.
>
> The alternative is to scan straight into the 16-bit space, taking every bit
> of information the scanner can perceive. This is why most controls are
> grayed out in Silverfast when it is set to either 16-bit grayscale or 48-bit
> RGB. Then, editing in 16-bit doesn't cause nearly as much  degradation as
> can happen in the 8-bit space. Once the image is edited, you can either save
> it as is or convert to 8-bit and save. A 16-bit file is twice as large as an
> 8-bit file. It's all math.
>
> Photoshop CS will have many more features available in 16-bit mode than are
> currently available in Photoshop 7. Some people only work in 16-bit.
> --
> jz
>
> >> <Snip>
> >> If you are scanning into Photoshop's 16-bit space, no adjustments need be
> >> made in the scanning process.
> >>
> >> <Snip>
> >
> > Jim Z could you explain this?
>
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Replies: Reply from "Jon" <jon.stanton@comcast.net> (Re: [Leica] Anyone been using the DiMAGE 5400?)
In reply to: Message from Jim Zietz <jzietz@lsu.edu> (Re: [Leica] Anyone been using the DiMAGE 5400?)