Matt,

While making a 16X20 may be a snap for 35mm film, I would submit that
it is painfully obvious when compared to MF or LF.  I personally don't
think 35mm generally looks that good beyond 11X14 - even there the
difference is obvious.


Bruce



Monday, February 10, 2003, 10:18:48 AM, you wrote:


MG> --- Brendan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Don't tell me, tell the digital is best guys. Mind
>> you
>> I had a model who printed out 4 MP shots she took on
>> her digi cam to 8x10 and showed an agency, They
>> laughed and told her to get shots on film. 
>> 
>>   --- "J. C. O'Connell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >
>> I've read alot of "garbage" about how you
>> > only need so many Mpixels scans to make a really
>> > good
>> > 8X10" digital print. Well I've been printing
>> > alot of 8X10" BW prints lately (digital, Epson
>> 1280
>> > printer set to 2880 dpi) and I'm finding
>> > you need LOTS of Mpixels to get optimum
>> > results.
MG>  > 

MG> I will cast this observation: you put more data on a
MG> 35mm negative shooting ISO 50 film than you can
MG> megapixelith a 14.1 megapixel small format SRL with a
MG> prime lens. None of which is of any importance unless
MG> you want to enlarge... say to about a 24 x 30 sized
MG> print. Some ISO 100 film will get you beymegapixel30:
MG> a 14.1 megapixel digital SLR won't now and never will.
MG> You need a medium format body, a 3-pass digital back
MG> and a lot of computer interpolation to get there, even
MG> with medium format.
MG> As we all know, a 16 x 20 enlargement is a snap with
MG> film, a stretch with small format digital.
MG> *I am not forgetting however, that some double-page,
MG> slick magazine ads are being shot with small format,
MG> multi-megapixel SLRs.   

MG> =====

MG> Matt Greene

MG> I get it done with YAHOO! DSL!

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