View Full Version : Influence of Film on scanning
deFocused
02-06-2007, 02:50
I wonder if anyone tought about the following:
The film base of films is different from one film to other. Some are more transparent than others. Do you think this has influence in the way films are scanned?
It seems to me that the more transparent the film base the more accurate and more information we can get from a scan.
Does this make sense? Am I missing something?
It's been discussed before, I'm positive.
When you scan a film with a dense base, it requires more light to pick up detail, and the scanner doesn't usually like that.
I've found I get more noise in the image from these kind of negs. Some sites recommend certain films specifically for scanning, because the thin base is easier to deal with.
I can't remember if this is correct, but someone recommended to over-expose and under-develop I think??
I may be totally wrong, but that's what I remember reading. Also when you scan, you can choose where on the histogram to scan, so most of the 'accuracy' is decided by you, and what you want from the neg.
deFocused
02-06-2007, 08:38
"When you scan a film with a dense base, it requires more light to pick up detail, and the scanner doesn't usually like that."
Do the scanners use this? I think they use always the same light.
"I may be totally wrong, but that's what I remember reading. Also when you scan, you can choose where on the histogram to scan, so most of the 'accuracy' is decided by you, and what you want from the neg."
Well, but that is only a post-processing issue. You are not getting more detail/information from the area in the histogram you decided to scan. I think....
When I use the scanning software with the Epson Stylus RX500 plugged into photoshop, I can alter how the image is scanned. The light does not change its brightness, but the scanner adjusts its light intake. That's my guess. Otherwise how would it pick up the extra details?
estepan99
02-06-2007, 08:57
Hi!
I even noticed a big difference in the developer used:
Some years ago I shot a Delta 3200 which I developed in ID11/D76 when I recall correctely, last weak I developed one in Amaloco AM74, which is supposed to be a fine grain developer.
The difference is night and day, where AM74 is night, deep, dark night!
The negs are so bad (for the Epson 4180-Scanner) that the scanned pics are nearly unusable. I donīt know how they will look like when enlarged wet. Surely better.
The old negs deved in ID11 are really awsome!
Greets, Stephan
bmicklea
02-06-2007, 09:00
I've noticed this yes. With my Nikon Coolscan I can vary the brightness of the LEDs to compensate but I do seem to lose some tonality (contrast compression). The best films to scan in my experience are the Ilford Delta films because of their relatively thin base. For this reason they've started to become my standard films.
Unexposed negs do seem to work better in the scanner than overexposed.
Unexposed negs do seem to work better in the scanner than overexposed.
That's funny... I would have thought an unexposed neg would come up blank? :D
photogdave
02-06-2007, 09:19
Rollei is marketing some new C41 colour neg films with a clear base designed for scanning. I hope to shoot a roll soon and post the results.
Just a general observation, I can never be bothered to test these things properly, but I’ve noticed with Fuji 400 superia I have less work to do to get what I want, nothing scientific it just seem to suit the scanner
charjohncarter
02-06-2007, 16:05
I have had to reduce my development times and agitation from earlier enlarger days negatives to get a more full tone scan. This has been a real pain because I have also had to cut the ISO to get good scanning shadow detail. The pain is retesting everything with little or no starting point.
deFocused
02-07-2007, 03:41
I have had to reduce my development times and agitation from earlier enlarger days negatives to get a more full tone scan. This has been a real pain because I have also had to cut the ISO to get good scanning shadow detail. The pain is retesting everything with little or no starting point.
Exactly the same conclusions that I am reaching...
And if you need to make a normal print is the negative usable?
Did you noticed any adavantage in films with a clear base regarding scanning. I have found that Fuji Acros is much more easy to handle that Delta for instance because the base is more transparent for the scanner (or maybe I am making something wrong).
HI, Iīve shot and scanned some of rollei/Macoīs films and they all had a clear PE base (cristal clear base much like tesa-film) wich helped scanning quite a bit I think.
AFAIK the denser the Base the more compressed is the tonal range captured by the scanner.
I think of it like this (simplified) for a clear base we assume the value 0 (zero) for max. density the scanner captures the value is 100 so 100steps between clear and dense (black n white)..if the Neg has a very gray base (HP5 or APX400 for example) you logicaly have a compressed range since it starts at a value of say 20 and ends at the scanners D-Max of 100 so only 80 steps in between.
I have one test roll of Rollei Scan Film 400 in my fridge but havent used it yet. looking forward to try scanning color negīs without orange mask and on PE base :-)
charjohncarter
02-07-2007, 07:38
deFocused, A normal print is possible, you might as in my case bump the contrast of the paper up. Which to me is easier than playing around with a scanner. I haven't noticed the film base having anything to do with the scans as I have been using only Tri-X and Plus-X. After I get this scanning mess straightened out I might branch out to other films. thafred said the Rollei/Maco base is very clear. That sounds like a good start.
deFocused
02-07-2007, 07:46
deFocused, A normal print is possible, you might as in my case bump the contrast of the paper up. Which to me is easier than playing around with a scanner. I haven't noticed the film base having anything to do with the scans as I have been using only Tri-X and Plus-X. After I get this scanning mess straightened out I might branch out to other films. thafred said the Rollei/Maco base is very clear. That sounds like a good start.
I have tried with Fuji Acros and Delta 400 and the scanner "notices" something like 2 stop (guessing) difference between the 2 films, being Acros the clear one, allowing much better tone capture from the scanner.
Anyway I must make much more tests...
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