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Sharpness and grain are not necessarily directly related, a notion that makes me twist my head like a dog hearing a tire squeal. There are reports that Fuji Acros is slightly finer grained than TMX, but not nearly as sharp, so this notion of grain size and sharpness not being 100% correlated has some real life examples. I'm reading into the post by Phil Lippincott, based on grain size. If he sees this, I'd love to read his comments. For some unknown reason, slide film and print film granularity are not measured on the same scale. > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-scan@leben.com [mailto:owner-scan@leben.com]On Behalf Of > Johnny Zasada > Sent: Monday, January 28, 2002 1:32 AM > To: scan@leben.com > Subject: Re: Kodak RFS3600 scanner > > > > > Anyway, for C41, it may be better to get an old Nikon > > with ICE on ebay since it doesn't need the higher resolution. > > Are you saying a color negative by definition can't be as sharp as a slide > film? That's new to me, but I've not been shooting much color > negative film > anyway. > > Johnny > > _________________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com > > - > Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate > subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions. > - Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions.
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