Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/08/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Peter: >You can see the noise in the darkest >areas. This is the kind of noise I am often plagued with. It tends to >happen more often in available light pictures than well-lit outdoor >shots. I've found that I get more grain when my exposure isn't quite right: http://canid.com/current/bear_hug.html When I do a better job exposing the negative, I get better results in terms of grain. This one was taken within 5 minutes of the 2nd. On the same roll of film and in somewhat similar lighting: http://canid.com/current/crackers.html Bear hug was slightly underexposed. It's a balancing act. For a given film/developer combo, there will be certain tones that show more grain. In my experience, giving those areas just slightly more or slightly less exposure will change how the grain shows in the final result. Both of these were shot with Neopan 400. For comparison, here's a shot on Neopan 1600 that shows less grain: http://canid.com/johanna/balancing_act.html It's almost magic. There are just certain sweet spots for given lighting conditions. A stop in either direction can really change how the grain appears. I've noticed a difference with just half-stop differences, as well. -- Eric http://canid.com/