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Scott wrote:
On Jan 28, 7:13am, Andrew Haley wrote: Audio Empire wrote: I know a local photographer who uses a 4 X 5 sheet-film camera that is fitted with a scanning digital back (from Leaf, I believe) connected directly to a laptop to capture the gigapixels of raw data that the camera produces. While his finished landscape photos are spectacular, they look "different" from the same shot on sheet Ektachrome or Fujichrome (he always makes a film exposure of the same shot - it's easy, just swap the digital back for a film holder). The film has more contrast and richer, more saturated colors. Indeed it does, and there's a parallel with audio here. That contrasty highly-saturated look is a bit like the "smiley EQ" and compression loved by record producers -- pretty it may be, but accurate it ain't. I remember one wag who on seeing Michael Fatali's photographs said "That's not God's own light, that's Fujichrome's own Velvia!" Digital, on the other hand, is linear, or can be once you find all the curves and filters in the workflow and turn them off. Once you've done that it's regular, stable, and repeatable, and *accurate*, just like digital audio can be. (I am rather sensitive to this issue, because one of my jobs is copying paintings for reproduction. If you want to be able to compare an original and a print side-by-side on a wall under bright lights, the last thing you want is a contrast and saturation boost.) I know this is off topic but this is simply a load of misinformation about color and contrast accuracy. Velvia is hardly the only film stock in the world of film. And digital is anything but color accurate. There is yet to be a digital color profile that begins to represent the color palette of the real world. Neither film nor digital imaging can match the contrast or color range of real life but film still covers more of it. Hold on one moment: I didn't suggest that any imaging device could represent the entire visible gamut. I didn't suggest that any digital imaging device had a larger gamut or contrast range than any film. I disagree that "digital is anything but color accurate": it's not perfect, of course, but from the point of view of repro work it's linear and repeatable, and can be accurate if done right. Also, digital (is there any other kind?) colour profiles certainly can represent all visible colours, even though no physical device can. My point was that the films popular for landscape photography are not accurate *because they are not designed to be*. Very much like CD mastering, in other words. Andrew. |
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