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Microfilm into wall size poster please??
Just get as high as possible resolution drum scan of the original film.
Internegs, microscopes, etc will only degrade the final image. "Pat" wrote in message ... On Oct 20, 12:58 am, slakka wrote: Dear NG, I wonder how to move foward with the above header please? Any pointers would be appreciated, thanks in advance! slakka rec.photo.digital , soc.libraries.talk ,rec.photo.film +labs ,alt.graphics.photoshop ,misc.business.records- mgmt ,rec.photo ,rec.photo.darkroom ,rec.photo.equipment. 35mm,comp.periphs.scanners You'll either have to scan the microfilm at a very high resolution or make an inter-negative. Ideally you can find someone with an old 35mm camera hooked to a microscope. You could then shoot an inter-neg using ortho film and get a pretty good image off of it. |
#2
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Microfilm into wall size poster please??
Litho film as an interneg will give you a hard edge at boundaries, so it
will "sharpen" text and halftone images, but it might not work well if you have continuous tone. Toby "Digital John" schrieb im Newsbeitrag news Just get as high as possible resolution drum scan of the original film. Internegs, microscopes, etc will only degrade the final image. "Pat" wrote in message ... On Oct 20, 12:58 am, slakka wrote: Dear NG, I wonder how to move foward with the above header please? Any pointers would be appreciated, thanks in advance! slakka rec.photo.digital , soc.libraries.talk ,rec.photo.film +labs ,alt.graphics.photoshop ,misc.business.records- mgmt ,rec.photo ,rec.photo.darkroom ,rec.photo.equipment. 35mm,comp.periphs.scanners You'll either have to scan the microfilm at a very high resolution or make an inter-negative. Ideally you can find someone with an old 35mm camera hooked to a microscope. You could then shoot an inter-neg using ortho film and get a pretty good image off of it. |
#3
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Microfilm into wall size poster please??
Sir F. A. Rien wrote:
NO copy, regardless of what it's done with is better than the original. That's not true with old documents, because copies and use filtration and even entirely different spectral bands. Consider some document that was rolled up, burned to a crisp, and then buried for 2000 years. Sort of hard to read! But, copying it with an infrared camera and it becomes quite clear. I've copied letters from my great grandparents that are 170 years old and are completely unreadable. Using ordinary infrared B&W film they are mostly readable with great effort. Looked at with a 1.8 micron TV camera they are as clear as the day they were written. Doug McDonald |
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