mjbehnke said:I would like to know how many MP's does a FF sensor need to be equal to a 35mm Film Camera?
dtaylor said:I don't believe there's any detail that can be recovered by projection that is not recovered by an Imacon.
mjbehnke said:The second part is kind of along the lines of getting a full frame digital camera. I have had some of the negatives blown up to poster size and they look excellent (B&W's as that is what I mainly shoot). If a 35mm film camera is about equal to 8-15mega pixels, than the 5dMark II should be just fine as it should perform better than my film camera???
Thanks,
Matthew
dtaylor said:mjbehnke said:I would like to know how many MP's does a FF sensor need to be equal to a 35mm Film Camera?
I did some pretty extensive comparisons when I picked up my 7D. The 7D matches Imacon scanned, 35mm Velvia 50 on high contrast detail and beats it on low contrast and color detail. (Film's ability to resolve detail varies based on detail contrast to a greater degree than digital.) I would put 35mm Velvia 50 at 12-18 MP depending on target contrast. For most photographic scenes I would put it at around 12 MP.
Velvia 50 is the highest resolution color film in production, and it pretty much matches the highest resolution B&W films available for general photography. (Special purpose B&W films can go higher, but they make lousy picture films.) So any other film, or any lesser scanner, and the number for film goes down considerably. Most films don't break 10 MP. Most scanners are even worse regardless of their reported dpi.
I don't believe there's any detail that can be recovered by projection that is not recovered by an Imacon.
motorhead said:Digital is certainly still behind film in available dynamic range.
gmrza said:mjbehnke said:The second part is kind of along the lines of getting a full frame digital camera. I have had some of the negatives blown up to poster size and they look excellent (B&W's as that is what I mainly shoot). If a 35mm film camera is about equal to 8-15mega pixels, than the 5dMark II should be just fine as it should perform better than my film camera???
Thanks,
Matthew
Earlier this year I did a comparison using the following:
film: EOS650, 50mm f/1.4, Speedlite 430EZ, Kodak TMAX 100
digital: EOS 5DmkII, 50mm f/1.4, Speedlite 580EXII.
Shooting roughly the same composition, the 5DII gave much better resolution (at ISO640) than the TMAX 100 black and white film did.
This was not a scientifically conducted test, but rather a subjective evaluation to satisfy my curiosity.
My feeling now is that you need to be really dedicated to want to shoot film.
Bear in mind that, as has been pointed out, film grain and digital noise are different in nature, which makes a direct comparison difficult.
dtaylor said:motorhead said:Digital is certainly still behind film in available dynamic range.
That depends entirely on the film. Velvia? DSLRs have a much wider DR. Portra? They're not quite there yet. The others fall somewhere in between. With B&W it depends on the emulsion and processing. Some film and developer combos can yield incredible DR.
One thing you'll find is that there is usually a trade off with film, or at least with color film, between resolution and DR. Velvia can hold its own on a good scanner in terms of resolution, but has much less DR. Portra can exceed a DSLR's DR, but can't touch it in terms of resolution. The combination of resolution, dynamic range, and high ISO capability in today's DSLRs is simply unmatched in 35mm film.
Zo0m said:I think the average lab will give you 2mp files when they process film to jpeg... Guess that shows megapixels arent everything![]()