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UPDATE: I checked the settings against my Full Frame Digital camera, and the Nikkormat is only 1 stop different! In the same box as the old camera is a light meter. Guess I'm gonna drag that out... oh and another lens. Thanks and best regards.
Know a guy who won an Emmy for his wildlife documentaries. His take on digital?"Pixels don't sing like silver!"There's just sumpin' right about analog images.
Hi Buddy,I ordered an Epson V700 from B&H. It arrived today, so we'll see what dilemmas will happen next! The two B&W photos that I posted have got some of that film sweetness I like, but do to the resolution and highlight issues you mentioned, they're not "all the way there" as of yet. It will be very interesting to see the negatives and future negatives and slides, as I can control the scan with the V700. Wish me good luck on set-up. Off to my next techmology adventure!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but once you scan a photo and post it on a website the image is no longer analog. It's digital.
I'm lucky enough to have a Heidelberg iQsmart3 scanner at work I use to scan film. The prints I can get scanning 4x5 films and then digitally printing on an Epson 7900 are stunning, much nicer than anything I could ever get in the wet darkroom. Like most ex-film guys, I can't ever imagine going back to wet darkroom enlarging. Scan film and then digitally print, the best of both worlds! As to a scanned film that's digitally printed no longer being "analog," all I can say is keep an open mind and look at well done prints made this way. The visual character of the film is definitely retained, you're not going to mistake it for a digital image capture. I used pyro developer for the last ten years of my film work and the enhanced edge definition that is a hallmark of that developer is very readily apparent in digital prints.