Years ago, I did some scans of MF and 35mm film at various resolutions. When it came to deriving fine detail, the law of diminshing returns started to set in aft about 1,200 PPI and definitely 2,000 PPI was the overkill point for realizable, printable, viewable information. 8x10 film format gave use about 60 times the surface area of 35mm, 4x5: 18, and MF about 3-5. The reason was for grainless prints as much as resolution. Since 8x10 uses the same "fuzzy lenses" as 4x5, it's pointless to scan at a greater resolution than 4x5 because the sharpness is realized by more square inches of film. 35mm is the bottom of the barrel for image quality for ovbious reasons and no amount of scanner resolution ((or taking lens resoution) can make up for lack of square inches. Claude [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Law of Diminishing returns
2004-12-03 by claudej1@aol.com
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