Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]on 30/10/00 3:57 pm, Erwin Puts at imxputs@knoware.nl wrote: > Look at the facts: I noted earlier that you should aim for the 135MB > possible with Kodachrome or even better hi-res BW film. I am shot dead for > this proposal, as it exemplifies The Idiots Approach To Ridiculous HiRes > Photography. > Then I note that maybe 20Mb would be a sensible compromise and I am again > shot dead because film can handle 100Mb or more and now it exemplifies The > Idiots Approach to Ridiculous Claims by Digital Photography. > I am confused! > Can anyone explain? No one ever called you an idiot, Erwin. You're way too sensitive about this. As to the previous numbers I can't comment. But your theoretical calculations are just way off what actually happens when you scan and print an image from a negative. First, the grain IS part of the photographic image. If I shoot 400 film I want to see the grain. Second, most modern inkjet printers require at least 300 ppi to image at their highest quality and many people claim there is a visible difference between 300 ppi and 600 ppi. But let's run with 300 ppi. Now let's assume you're printing on a widely available printer like an Epson 1160 or an Epson 1270 which will print on paper up to 13x19. So we're going to use all of that with an inch margin ... so we'll print 17 x 11 roughly. We want it to approximate the quality of a conventional silver gelatin print, right, so we NEED to see the grain at that size unless we're just going to not print our 400 negs that big. Now let's do the math. 11x17x300x300 = 16 Mb for a monochrome image or 48 Mb for a color image. If you go to Digital Silver you will find that this is really the minumum most hybrid photographers would regard as workable for high quality output... and decidedly marginal at that. Now that's just for starters. Like I say, many inkdot-sniffers will claim you should print at 600 dpi not 300 dpi for maximum quality. Moreover, most filmscanners will return 12 bits of data, which very useful when, for instance, you darken a sky in photoshop... you often find your detail in those last 4 bits. I know I do. So you need 2 bytes not 1 for each pixel. When you do this calculation you get much bigger numbers: 11x17x600x600x2 = 134 Mb for a monochrome file, three times that for color. Now I think that is extreme but from personal experience I can tell you that the difference between an 11x17 print from a 2400 dpi 8-bit scan (already bigger than the 20 Mb you keep talking about) and an 11x17 print from a 4000 dpi 16-bit scan is ENORMOUS. If this was not the case then there would, for example, be no market for the Polaroid Sprintscan 4000 scanner. Either I'm lying or 20 Mb isn't enough. Your numbers remind me of the oft-quoted example of the aeronautical engineer and the bee. You may discount my and others' assertions but we have the advantage of actually producing high-quality digital prints ourselves, so ours is a practical rather than a theoretical standpoint. Personally I think the flaw in your reasoning is dazzlingly obvious but my counterrexample will have to do for the moment. - -- John Brownlow http://www.pinkheadedbug.com