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#81 |
Active Member
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That is a measure of how much image can be exposed into the film. Once that image is exposed I can then scan it any any resolution.
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#82 | |
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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I asked: 1. The image on a 35mm film is made up of film grains. Do you believe this or not? 2. Do you believe that, given the right equipment (like a scanner/microscope/whatever) that the number of grains making up a particular image could be counted? Do you believe the 2 things I asked above? |
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#83 |
Active Member
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Whether I believe them or not is irrelevant to the debate... Yes you could count the grain on a piece of film. That doesn't equate to the resolution. Let's just for examples sake say that a piece of film has 100 individual pieces of grain. I can scan that piece of film at 2K or 4K and it will have those resolutions respectively regardless of the grain count...
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#84 |
Special Member
Feb 2008
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4k2k film is not analog, it's an optical medium not electronic. Not all 35mm movies are scanned digitally for editing, so I am correct in saying film has a limited definition, not measured in pixels. You can have two lots of film stock of equal size, but not equal definition.
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#85 | ||
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_resolution Quote:
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#86 | |
Active Member
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Did that grab your attention. Okay good. 35mm film is a bigger film stock and have greater image exposure. When you have a bigger image, you can have more "pickets" on the film. And I answered you before. Whether I believe them or not is irrelevant to the debate... Yes you could count the grain on a piece of film. That doesn't equate to the resolution. Let's just for examples sake say that a piece of film has 100 individual pieces of grain. I can scan that piece of film at 2K or 4K and it will have those resolutions respectively regardless of the grain count... |
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#87 | |
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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It's like saying a standard definition DVD has as much resolution as full HD because you can resize it to full HD. Yes you can resize it but the resolution in the actual source isn't full HD. Say if you had a picture made up of 100 circles, no matter how many pixels you use to scan that picture, the resolution of the actual picture is still 100 circles. |
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#88 |
Banned
Jul 2008
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The intent of IMAX is to dramatically increase the resolution of the image by using much larger film stock at a resolution comparable to about 10000 x 7000 pixels
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#89 | |
Active Member
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#90 | |
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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There's no need to be rude.
If you think wikipedia's definition of resolution is wrong you are free to change it. There are many definitions of resolution where it basically says it's how much resolvable detail something is able to produce. Even the resolution of analogue video. Look up definitions of resolution on the web. Here's webster's definition: Quote:
making distinguishable the individual parts of an object=the individual posts in a picket fence as recorded by an 8mm film camera or a 35mm film camera Last edited by 4K2K; 10-25-2008 at 06:47 AM. |
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#91 | |
Active Member
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Hope that's clear. |
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#92 | |||
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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![]() The thing is, I think you are thinking that when we say resolution we are only talking about the number of pixels used to scan a piece of film. eg. a 4k scan or a 2k scan. The definitions of resolution on the web, in books etc. also define resolution as being things like "the ability of a microscope, or a television or computer screen, to show things clearly and with a lot of detail:" or Quote:
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Last edited by 4K2K; 10-25-2008 at 07:04 AM. |
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#93 | |
Active Member
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#94 | |
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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I know a film grain does not equal a pixel. But as one film maker once said something like "film has capability due to it's grain structure of resolving only so much - and no matter how much you blow up film, there's a certain limitation on how much can be resolved" - or something like that Last edited by 4K2K; 10-25-2008 at 07:48 AM. |
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#95 | |
Active Member
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You proved my point in your own words. There is a limit to how much an image can be stretched out due to how much image is exposed on the film. In come the bigger film stocks such as IMAX film stocks which can then be scanned at very high resolutions. The film it self has no resolution, but bigger film stock and exposure can equate to a bigger image being scanned. |
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#96 | |||||
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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Here's what askoxford.com says about resolution: Quote:
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Last edited by 4K2K; 10-25-2008 at 07:46 AM. |
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#97 | ||
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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I think most of the recent movies (well the big releases at least) have been scanned digitally for editing/grading (digital intermediate) - usually at 2K. I think they usually scan the negative for this. So for these films (that have had a 2K DI) the final film can't have more than 2K of actual resolution. For older films they'll probably have had more optical processing stages I think (lowering the resolution) and they don't usually scan the original negative (they often scan the interpositive I believe or perhaps even another generation film) - and so they can look lower quality than some of the more recent films that have had a digital intermediate (even at 2k) I think. Also, newer film stocks are better than older ones. Quote:
Last edited by 4K2K; 10-25-2008 at 08:29 AM. |
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#98 |
Member
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well sadly we dont have a IMAX in Hawaii, so i havent seen the preview before I Am Legend, but i did buy Batman Begins on Blu Ray and watched the 6 or 7 min open scene of The Dark Knight and it looked great! im hopping it will look that good when it finally comes out on Blu Ray!
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#100 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
What's the Resolution of 8mm & 16mm film? | General Chat | OrlandoEastwood | 2 | 05-23-2017 09:12 PM |
IMAX Quality for whole film | Display Theory and Discussion | harry_hman18 | 36 | 08-27-2009 05:57 PM |
Topic: Imax Film vs Imax Digital | Movies | Neil_Luv's_BLU | 7 | 03-24-2009 04:36 PM |
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Any IMAX (70mm Film) Transfer to HD ? | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | JimPullan | 5 | 09-27-2006 04:45 PM |
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