Great to see you here. Join our insightful photographic forum today and start tapping into a huge wealth of photographic knowledge. Completing our simple registration process will allow you to gain access to exclusive content, add your own topics and posts, share your work and connect with other members through your own private inbox! And don’t forget to say hi!
To clarify (too late to edit): I meant I was waiting for someone to say "they are all digital on line", not that #3 is digital. The poll runs for two weeks -- I'm not giving any hints.@darr: I was waiting for someone to say that
I agree. I shoot both, and develop BW... 1 and 2 show the type of detail that only film can give... digital lacks the gradual tone slope (DR) and adds edge detail that film does not have, [IE: Film has a more feathered edge sharpness]. But, Digital has more finer detail and the edges are more defined than film. Giving digital a sharper appearance, even though it may not be actually sharper, but just records edges with less feathering than film.I voted Mike! I'm probably way off base (which wouldn't surprise me at all), but at least I voted! Still waiting to hear.....got my money on number 3! When will you pull the curtain back and announce the results?
Gary
Hi, just saw your reply. Don't feel bad that I "got you" . I wasn't really trying to. I just found myself in awe of the "smoothness" of the Rollei Retro 80S frame, even compared to an M8 file from the same day. The Retro 80S is a very nice film, but super-contrasty, which may account for the blown highlights (that, or my scanner, of course).Interesting.
I voted before realizing you released the answers. I was pretty sure #1 was film, not too sure about #2 but sure that#3 was digital because it seems clipped with very smooth tones. You got me.
Joe