The first picture was taken by Joseph Nipus in 1814. This photo takes 8 hours light and eventually (Baylis) disappears. Now 200 years have passed, most people can get the skills necessary to take high resolution photos as soon as they press a button, but this new technology certainly is better than the movie . Digital cameras make photos easier and more popular, but their convenience sacrifices photographic quality. As there are many different people, everyone has different ideas about what is a good photo, what opportunity to use the camera, the style of the photograph is countless and there are all photographers
There are two scanners, Epson V600 tablet and Plustek 8200i. Epson does not have a good solution. Plustek has much better resolution, but it's still not perfect but it's definitely better. But it has some problems, whether the film holder reflects light on the film ... I do not know what happened, but the scan tends to move slightly purple to the top and bottom edges Yes. It is not too difficult to fix, but it will still take some time
For those who may be interested, I still shoot a 35 mm film, but most of my film work uses the 6 x 4.5 medium format. I have a Mamiya 645E with 45mm, 80mm, 210mm lens. The film I chose is Kodak Ektar 100 and Portra 400 Pan F Plus, FP 4 Plus and HP 5 Plus for color, depending on the conditions and appearance I wanted. I chose to use a medium format to get bigger negatives and high image quality of 35 mm and above (larger negative means smaller magnification).
In movie close-up industry, movies were always the main choice for recording. Therefore, the camera can use many options for various film stocks. However, 35 mm film is standard size since the early days of film. When the movie was still a new invention, it began more than a hundred years ago. The 35 mm film size is from Thomas Edison, formerly known as "Edison Size" (Rogge, 1996). In May 1889, Edison ordered a Kodak camera for Eastman. Edison designed this, ordered a half size or 35 mm film from the same company. Then he used it with his invention, a film projector called "Kinetoscope", a mobile movie strip that only one person could see at a time.