Godfrey
somewhat colored
Been busy and lost track of this thread a little this past week and some. Sorry.
Well, given a Leica M digital body and a 35mm full frame negative, if you reduce the size of the negative to the dimensions of APS-C (about 1:2 or so), you've reduced the resolution from 24 MPixel to about 10 Mpixel. That loses too much, IMO. I want to capture at the same resolution as my Nikon Coolscan V film scanner, which nets about 21 Mpixel at 4000ppi from the full frame, minus the little bit that the film carrier crops. Having more pixels, particularly with film capture, allows more flexibility in rendering and preparing the image for printing.
What I have been working with is using a CL body rather than the M body to capture 35mm negatives. This has some advantages: You can use the "easier" 1:2 magnification settings to fill the frame, you're using the "sweet spot" in the center of your taking lens, and you're still getting 24 Mpixel resolution. Copy situations (everything locked down tight on BEOON and light box) means you can use the sensor's base ISO (100 or 200 depending on who you believe) plus the optimum, non-diffraction generating aperture setting to get maximum dynamic range and image quality ... and you no longer need a specialized flat-field lens to cover the sensor to the corners with optimal results because the center sweet spot of any good macro lens (or even my favorite Summicron-R 50mm f/2) is good enough when it comes to field flatness. You also don't need the BEOON loupe magnifier since the CL's EVF is very crisp and includes both focus peaking and focus magnification assistants.
This is proving to be a very useful approach for me.
G
Is full frame really necessary? I understand wanting to get the most out of your camera’s sensor, but ask yourself if you really need that much resolution. When using the BEOON and EL-Nikkor 50/2.8 in my setup, the negative image takes up about ⅔ of the sensor space. This is plenty of resolution for my needs, and sharpness fall-off at corners is never an issue. I’m always using the sweet spot of the lens.
Well, given a Leica M digital body and a 35mm full frame negative, if you reduce the size of the negative to the dimensions of APS-C (about 1:2 or so), you've reduced the resolution from 24 MPixel to about 10 Mpixel. That loses too much, IMO. I want to capture at the same resolution as my Nikon Coolscan V film scanner, which nets about 21 Mpixel at 4000ppi from the full frame, minus the little bit that the film carrier crops. Having more pixels, particularly with film capture, allows more flexibility in rendering and preparing the image for printing.
What I have been working with is using a CL body rather than the M body to capture 35mm negatives. This has some advantages: You can use the "easier" 1:2 magnification settings to fill the frame, you're using the "sweet spot" in the center of your taking lens, and you're still getting 24 Mpixel resolution. Copy situations (everything locked down tight on BEOON and light box) means you can use the sensor's base ISO (100 or 200 depending on who you believe) plus the optimum, non-diffraction generating aperture setting to get maximum dynamic range and image quality ... and you no longer need a specialized flat-field lens to cover the sensor to the corners with optimal results because the center sweet spot of any good macro lens (or even my favorite Summicron-R 50mm f/2) is good enough when it comes to field flatness. You also don't need the BEOON loupe magnifier since the CL's EVF is very crisp and includes both focus peaking and focus magnification assistants.
This is proving to be a very useful approach for me.
G