Mark Norton
Well-known
JohanV said:You must have a huge dog, I even manage to fit my mother-in-law in there...
Are you saying your mother-in-law is a dog?
S
StuartR
Guest
JohanV said:Totally OT, I know, but do the people who love Leica have this nostalgic treat that makes us also go for classic cars?
I sold my Jag E type and MG TC last year, to buy, wait for it...
a brand new Morgan Roadster.
If I find the time, I'll open a thread about this somewhere else...
Nope. I am perfectly happy with a modern, comfortable automatic with good fuel mileage. I drive a VW...
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
An interesting read I had just now. NaturFoto of Feb. 2002, a test of the Canon D30, a 3.2 MP camera of at least 4 generations back:
" The contrast latitude of the sensor is superior to slide film. The detail in the shadows is kept."
[about final prints for professional use] In sizes from A4 to A3 "a quality difference between analog and digital is scarcely, if at all, noticeable"
I might add that this magazine, back then, could be firmly placed in the digital-sceptic group.
" The contrast latitude of the sensor is superior to slide film. The detail in the shadows is kept."
[about final prints for professional use] In sizes from A4 to A3 "a quality difference between analog and digital is scarcely, if at all, noticeable"
I might add that this magazine, back then, could be firmly placed in the digital-sceptic group.
V
varjag
Guest
You know that saying.. an honest journalist sells only once, but for a good pricejaapv said:I might add that this magazine, back then, could be firmly placed in the digital-sceptic group.
S
StuartR
Guest
I have given up saying film wins on x digital wins on x, X megapixels at 11x14 makes a better print than xISO film...it really doesn't matter. The point is THEY LOOK DIFFERENT. And they look different from members of the same family too. By that I mean that digital from a 20D looks different from digital from a Fuji S3 and different from a PowerShot A620 and different from the DMR. At the same time, E100G in 35mm looks different than Velvia 4x5 and Lucky film looks different than Acros and so on. The key is not to get in a pissing contest about what is better, who can make a larger print and so on. It is about choosing the right medium for your intended use! If I want to make a 16x20 black and white fiber print, I am going to choose a film like Acros in 120 or 4x5. If I am going to be shooting wildlife I am going to choose a digital SLR. Obviously preference comes into it, but the most important thing to know is how to select the right tools for your job. The right tools for one person might be different for another.
Nachkebia
Well-known
Owning D200 I can asure you 10mpix is enough for almost all the apliactions and print sizes, but again digital is lifeless 
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
StuartR said:I have given up saying film wins on x digital wins on x, X megapixels at 11x14 makes a better print than xISO film...it really doesn't matter. The point is THEY LOOK DIFFERENT. And they look different from members of the same family too. By that I mean that digital from a 20D looks different from digital from a Fuji S3 and different from a PowerShot A620 and different from the DMR. At the same time, E100G in 35mm looks different than Velvia 4x5 and Lucky film looks different than Acros and so on. The key is not to get in a pissing contest about what is better, who can make a larger print and so on. It is about choosing the right medium for your intended use! If I want to make a 16x20 black and white fiber print, I am going to choose a film like Acros in 120 or 4x5. If I am going to be shooting wildlife I am going to choose a digital SLR. Obviously preference comes into it, but the most important thing to know is how to select the right tools for your job. The right tools for one person might be different for another.
Well said!!!
JohanV
another GAS victim
Mark Norton said:Are you saying your mother-in-law is a dog?
Well...., let's just say that I wouldn't like to be bitten...
Bob Ross
Well-known
One website that digs into this and tries to cover the film vs. digital issue is Norman Koren's at http://www.normankoren.com/Tutorials/MTF7.htmlvarjag said:That's actually interesting. A simple example illustrating Shannon theorem (also known as Nyquist as ampguy pointed out) would be to imagine what happens when we have a line 1 pixel wide, and the boundary for line pair falls in the middle of pixel: we lose it. Hence the detailwidth/2 sampling (or pixel size) criterion.
It's a nice camera, although it is older than my father by a decadeApparently it was used by press or wedding photographer, as serrated limbs are nearly polished down with fingers and aftermarket flash synch socket also seen some use. Picked it up fairly cheap, to replace a Kiev body that I wore out, amazing that it still works.
The Contax II was made 1936 to 1940. Mine saw the most use by a U.S. Army officer observing the Japanese invasion of China. I also had a Contax IIa made 1950 to 1961. When I got the Contax there was a competition between Leica and Contax users (we haven't changed
ampguy
Veteran
try a fuji
try a fuji
or an adapter for m42 lenses on your d200
try a fuji
or an adapter for m42 lenses on your d200
Nachkebia said:Owning D200 I can asure you 10mpix is enough for almost all the apliactions and print sizes, but again digital is lifeless![]()
Bob Ross
Well-known
Now, this deserves some discussionNachkebia said:but again digital is lifeless![]()
Digital is different. The biggest difference to me is the rate at which detail falls off in the highlights. The noise shows up in the shadows and diminishes towards the high lights, the opposite of the way grain revealed itself. This alters the tactileness of images. Many people cure this by eliminating noise, when they should be adding it. I think too, that much of the lifelessness might be a result of inexperienced post processing, because people aren't aware of what brings life to an image. For some digital users, the only thing they have to go by is the image on their TV or monitor screen & magazines. They have never visited a gallery of fine art prints.
What do you think makes digital lifeless and is there any hope?
LCT
ex-newbie
Nothing.Bob Ross said:...What do you think makes digital lifeless...?
Ever tried the R-D1 with Leica lenses?
More life than Leica M with same lenses and Kodachrome 200.
Less grain though.


Best,
LCT
S
StuartR
Guest
Is anyone still using Kodachrome 200?
Bob Ross
Well-known
No, but I use R lenses on my E-1.....LCT said:Nothing.
Ever tried the R-D1 with Leica lenses?
More life than Leica M with same lenses and Kodachrome 200.
Less grain though.
Best,
LCT
I don't think I ever shot a roll of Kodachrome 200.
Bob
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