Godfrey
somewhat colored
Ok, I've got a quick question...Is there an advantage to using a macro lens in the negative enlarger set-up over using an actual enlarging lens? I was looking over a manual for a Omega c700 enlarger (a lot available on eBay) and it says the minimum "magnification" for the c700 was .55 with a 50mm enlarging lens. So, if you had a reversing adapter on the front of the enlarging lens and then attached that to a DSLR you could get the needed mag of .65-.67 for a crop sensor. Does this make any sense?
I know dedicated scanners come up on eBay quite often, but a Nikon Coolscan is not cheap and I think I could rig up this enlarger set up for less than a Plustek. Anyway, it is fun to fiddle with contraptions like this.
In my many experiments with macro photography, I tried a lot of different lenses including enlarging lenses. Enlarging lenses seemed to do best in high reproduction ratio capture, that is, flat objects being imaged at 2:1 to 15:1 magnification. This might seem logical as they are designed/optimized to image flat field subjects (say 35mm film) to flat field targets (paper) in this range.
Dedicated camera macro lenses work a lot better in the 1:1 to 1:4 magnification range. Generally speaking, the capture of a 35mm negative to a digital sensor is 1:1 for 35mm negative to full-frame sensor and about 1:1.5 to 1:2 for 35mm negative to APS-C sensor.
Older, manual macro lenses for Nikon, Canon, Pentax, etc mounts are workhorses, often some of the best lenses in the manufacturers' range. They go for very reasonable prices on the used market given their quality.
G