Hmmm. Foir years we struggled with low speed films like Panatomic X to try to minimize grain. Now we're trying to find ways to put it back in <g>. Seriously, there are some filters that can simulate grain. I think there's one in Kai's Power Tools. Do a google search.
> On Tue, 7 Dec 2004 18:38:26 -0800, Shel Belinkoff > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Fine work, Rob. Good to see what can be done with B&W conversions and the > > RAW format. Between you and Juan, I may be moving closer to a DSLR all the > > faster. I do miss the grain though ... > > The other day I started playing in Photoshop with some grain. I was > thinking about shooting a frame of Tri-X of a flat grey card, scanning > that and extracting the grain, to use on digital images. Then I > realized that good results can be obtained with some noise and > gaussian blur. > > What do the purists in the list think about these idea of fake grain? > > j > > > -- > Juan Buhler > http://www.jbuhler.com > blog at http://www.jbuhler.com/blog >

