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Re: Black and white negative scanning
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Re: Black and white negative scanning


  • Subject: Re: Black and white negative scanning
  • From: Chris Protopapas <email@hidden>
  • Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:14:32 -0500

A dynamic range of 5.0? You're talking Status T densitometry? I find that hard to believe. That means the highlights would be blacker than the DMax of a transparency.


Chris Protopapas ************ email@hidden Fuel Digital Inc. 902 Broadway, 11th Floor New York, NY 10010 P 212-564-4646 F 212-564-2131 www.fueldigitalinc.com



On Nov 13, 2007, at 11:20 PM, Scott Martin wrote:

Negatives have a much more resrtricted dynamic range, which means you have a better chance on a flatbed to capture everything you need as compared to scanning a transparency.

While color negs have a very low dynamic range, some B&W negs (like TMAX100) have a very high dynamic rage sometimes exceeding 5.0.


The big advantage of a drum scanner is the increased sensitivity to light, which helps a lot in scanning transparencies that have deep shadow detail.

While it's one thing to get excellent detail across a high dynamic range, it's another thing to get excellent detail across a very narrow dynamic range. Color C-41 negs have a very narrow range. To take things to an extreme, let's say we are dealing with a B&W neg that is 6+ stops under or over exposed. This hypothetical neg would be nearly clear or black and only a drum scanner would be able to pull so much detail out of it.


I remember a particular, black "bulletproof" neg from 1995 that wouldn't print in the wet darkroom with 20+ minute exposure times nor scan on a CCD scanner but the drum scanner I ran was able to produce a final file that looked quite normal. It was a shining but rare example of drum scan superiority.

Scott Martin
www.on-sight.com









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 >Re: Black and white negative scanning (From: Chris Protopapas <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Black and white negative scanning (From: Chris Protopapas <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Black and white negative scanning (From: Scott Martin <email@hidden>)

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