4X5 Tmax100 in Tmax dev

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...
 
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.
 
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.
 
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
 
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.
 
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.
This was not a polite way to make your point.

To the OP, I think they look great and even in smaller jpeg format, I can tell they aren't 35mm....
 
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