Originally posted by Frances_iom
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Apart from the obvious quality of a decent camera and lens, resolution "loss" was lack of basic photographic technique ie adequate depth of field etc - this is a very common basic error made by people expecting sharp images with target distances well out of kilter with the lens aperture and light level, this worse with long length lenses - moving targets, camera shake and simply the fact that early multi-layer colour emulsions did not have the resolution anyway – 35mm black and white is much better. If the scanner lets you see the grain sharply the rest is down to technique. Professionally taken photos should be better of course than amateur ones by minimising all these factors' influence. There is no substitute for lots of light [+ flash perhaps], fast shutters and small apertures and of course fast film BUT there also lies compromise.
Assuming 35mm film [whose image size is smaller than some other formats being only about 34 x 23 mm or 1.43 x 0.95 in, an aspect ratio of about 1.42] then if scanned at say 400 dpi [typical of scanning images and documents for computer storage] then each image would need about 0.2 Megapixels. This is possibly good enough for images from a cheap camera or perhaps prints. This computer’s display is only 1280 by 1024 pixels or just under 1.3 megapixels. “Full” HDTV displays are 1920x 1080 [note different aspect ratio of 16 x9 or 1.77] or about 2 megapixels with UDTV [future] requiring 4.
As a comparison modern digital still camera imaging devices routinely offer as much as 15 megapixels or even more – but that is the limiting potential. That's 75 times more than you’d get at 400 dpi. To emulate 15 megapixels [some manufacturers cheat and claim 15 but this is shared between the RGB/YUV colours so each pixel only actually gets 5 megapixels or even 3.8] a dpi of about 3,250 is needed and should of course be reflected in a printer!! Such a dpi means slow scanning though and huge files - typically each pixel takes at least 3 bytes. Interesting that large megapixel cameras can use jpg to contain file size but too small a jpg file compromises the high pixel count!! And beware Dave's warning in #6.
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