= Original Message From Rob Geraghty [EMAIL PROTECTED] =
Tom wrote:
Not an answer, but I had exactly the same problem
with Supra 400. Stopped using it even though it
is supposed to be 'scanner optimized'.
I have a number of supra 400 images that I will need to get
decent scans of.
Jawed Ashraf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the photographer in the breeze! I want to try Provia 400F to get the
same
sort of speed which hopefully less apparent grain.
Provia 400 (F? are there variants?) scans beautifully - no grain aliasing
in
shadows on the LS40 (my mate Joel's Provia 400 - he
Obviously the Provia films are slides and the Superia are negs, just to
clarify.
Provia 400 is a miserable film (also sold as Sensia II 400). It is
grainy, has poor color, often shifting very cyan, and is too contrasty
in bright light, which is the only way to get decent color out of it,
which
Provia 400F is a new beast, and has received very good eviews. I have a few
rolls waiting for low light situations, but haven't used them yet.
Deservedly so , it behaves just like the 100F with very fine grain , just 2
stops faster..
I've had a magazine cover published with a pic shot
]]On Behalf Of Arthur Entlich
Sent: 06 September 2001 16:38
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Re: filmscanners: supra 400
Obviously the Provia films are slides and the Superia are negs, just to
clarify.
Provia 400 is a miserable film (also sold as Sensia II 400). It is
grainy, has
On Thu, 6 Sep 2001 10:08:20 +1000 =?iso-8859-1?Q?Rob=20Geraghty?=
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Odd. I thought Tony said the SS4000 aliased less than 2700ppi scanners.
Can someone explain this to me? ISTM that people are seeing grain at
4000ppi
and calling it aliasing?
It is utterly