Kenj8246
Well-known
charjohncarter
Veteran
Well, you didn't miss on this one!!
Tom hicks
Well-known
Nice Kenny ,where was this . Really like the tones.
Kenj8246
Well-known
Thanks, y'all. Tom, I slipped up to Cavanaugh last Saturday and shot nothing but 4X5.
Kenj8246
Well-known
Another 4X5 Tmax 100 souped in Tmax dev. This little thing is mostly engine and gas tank. 
Engine and gas tank by Kenny Johnson, on Flickr
Kenny

Kenny
nikon_sam
Shooter of Film...
Those are really great...you're inspiring me to get my 4x5 out...just gotta find a subject...
How about some details on lens & exposure if you have it...
How about some details on lens & exposure if you have it...
BillBingham2
Registered User
I love the rich feeling of a 4x5 B&W.......
Very nice, thanks for sharing.
B2
Very nice, thanks for sharing.
B2
jschrader
Well-known
I am just scanning 15 years old 4x5 negatives, after having put the camera away because of the family.
I compare them with 35 mm negatives; they are just different even if you do not see the difference in detail - meaning resolution.
I don't know how to describe it. The pictures "would not work" in 35mm.
I compare them with 35 mm negatives; they are just different even if you do not see the difference in detail - meaning resolution.
I don't know how to describe it. The pictures "would not work" in 35mm.
Kenj8246
Well-known
Scaning kills anything useful out of a negative.
A negative is enlarged. The grain is enlarged. This is the whole principle.
Once scaned, what is there left? A file resolution is worlds away from a negative's resolution. Both can't be Compared. A scan is not an enlargement, it is a picture of a negative in digital form.
I agree that a 4x5 is better then a 35mm negative, in many aspects, but both cannot be compared digitally. Especially not on web format, and especially not when scaned on a flatbed. The nature of the negatives are killed.
To compare them, one must use a loupe, and compare prints as well.
No scans, no computer screens.
The best example is the posted photo in the OP: there is absolutely no way to distinguish it: is it a 35mm neg? Digital? Medium format? 4x5? Half-frame? Cropped? Is it a color negative? Iphone shot? No one can answer this exactly. It's impossible to answer.
Well gosh, thanks for all the positivity, Ned.
Kenj8246
Well-known
Those are really great...you're inspiring me to get my 4x5 out...just gotta find a subject...
How about some details on lens & exposure if you have it...
The lens is a Rodenstock 150mm. IIRC (because I don't do a good job of keeping all that stuff straight), these were shot at f22 and around a second or two. Pretty sure I rated the Tmax @ 80 and developed in Tmax 1+9 for 14 minutes or so.
Kenny
Kenj8246
Well-known
I love the rich feeling of a 4x5 B&W.......
Very nice, thanks for sharing.
B2
Thanks, Bill, I appreciate it.
I am just scanning 15 years old 4x5 negatives, after having put the camera away because of the family.
I compare them with 35 mm negatives; they are just different even if you do not see the difference in detail - meaning resolution.
I don't know how to describe it. The pictures "would not work" in 35mm.
Agree, a 4X5 negative is 'different'; I find myself shooting LF almost to the exclusion of my other analog gears.
hipsterdufus
Photographer?
This was not a polite way to make your point.Scaning kills anything useful out of a negative.
A negative is enlarged. The grain is enlarged. This is the whole principle.
Once scaned, what is there left? A file resolution is worlds away from a negative's resolution. Both can't be Compared. A scan is not an enlargement, it is a picture of a negative in digital form.
I agree that a 4x5 is better then a 35mm negative, in many aspects, but both cannot be compared digitally. Especially not on web format, and especially not when scaned on a flatbed. The nature of the negatives are killed.
To compare them, one must use a loupe, and compare prints as well.
No scans, no computer screens.
The best example is the posted photo in the OP: there is absolutely no way to distinguish it: is it a 35mm neg? Digital? Medium format? 4x5? Half-frame? Cropped? Is it a color negative? Iphone shot? No one can answer this exactly. It's impossible to answer.
To the OP, I think they look great and even in smaller jpeg format, I can tell they aren't 35mm....
Kenj8246
Well-known
^ I think Ned is just a 'glass is half empty' kind of guy. 
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