Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A regular on an IRC chat room I frequent has chellenged me to compare a print he made with his 4x5 camera (and lens of his choice) to one made with my APO 90 M lens (on 35mm film, obviously). My counter offer to him would be to have him choose the best 1 square inch from his best 4x5 negative, enlarge that to 10" x 10", and I'll do the same with a square inch from a negative shot with my 90. My gut instinct would be that the Leica image will win hands down, but I don't think he will accept such a counter offer. Dan C. At 09:36 AM 19-03-00 +0000, Mike Johnston wrote: >>>>I did say that Leica pictures deliver comparable quality >and sometimes under suitable conditions may challenge 120 format >pictures up to 12 times enlargement. An enlargement from a Leica >negative to a format of 12x16inch is a factor of 12, The same print >for a 120-negative is an enlargement of 5 to 6 times. If under these >unfavorable conditions a Leica print can be compared favorably to a >Hasselblad print speaks very well for Leica lenses.<<< > > > >Our research specifically and conclusively disproves the above >statements. We made the prints, and showed them to a panel of viewers. >The viewers decisively and overwhelmingly chose the medium-format prints >as being of higher quality at this size. The above conclusion therefore >does not stand up to experimental corroboration. > >To reiterate the test conditions: > >The same scene was shot with a Leica M6 and 50mm Summicron lens very >securely affixed to a very heavy tripod. Exposures were made at f/8 on >Kodak Ektar 25 film. Prints were made in a very well equipped >professional darkroom on an Omega D5 Dichroic with Chromegatrol and >Apo-Rodagon 90mm lens (yes--the original one). Scenes were chosen that >did not create problems for the inherently high contrast of this film. > >These were compared to prints made from negatives made with a Pentax 6x7 >camera and 90/2.8 lens, on 100-speed Kodak VPS, handheld. These >negatives were printed with the same enlarger on the same paper. > >I.e., the small-format prints were optimized for image quality, and the >medium-format prints weren't. > >Viewers included professional photographers, photography students, >professional visual arts people such as art directors and graphic >designers, and non-photographers. We didn't direct their conclusions--we >simply asked them to choose which print they thought had "better >quality" however they chose to define it. > >At smaller than 8x10 sizes the 35mm prints won. At 8x10 it was a wash. >By 11x14 there was a preference for the medium-format prints, but it was >not overwhelming (although the professionals more clearly preferred the >medium-format prints). By 16x20--it was very close to 12X--everyone >chose the medium-format prints. We didn't make prints larger than that. > >Incidentally, we did the same experiments comparing 6x7 and 4x5, with >very interesting results, but that's OT for this forum. > >I'm sympathetic to the temptation to compare things like MTF percentages >and extropolate out to what "should be" the case, but it amounts to >wishful thinking--more careful research than that is required to find >the truth. There is more to "print quality" than lp/mm. > >--Mike > > >