shoot on 100iso film or digi at 100iso, if the source is grain free then your prints will be
a
2007-12-07 14:03:18
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answer #1
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answered by Antoni 7
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For digital it is called noise and it is ugly, especially in color. . If your prints are noisy, you need to control the ISO. Use a lower ISO whenever possible and avoid underexposure. In film, also use lower ISO. In film, some grain is not usually so objectionable. In fact, most digital image working programs have some sort of "film grain" filter to attempt to duplicate the real thing.
2007-12-08 07:52:27
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answer #2
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answered by Ara57 7
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Usually, slower film speed (the film has to be exposed longer) has a finer grain. That holds true with color or black and white.
I used to develop a lot of my own black and white photographs. I used a 400 film speed (back in the day that was incredibly fast) and the enlargements came out grainy...I was wanting that look. The more I enlarged the negative the grainier it got.
If you are asking about digital cameras, you need to get one that has I higher megapixel count. The higher the count the finer the photograph.
2007-12-07 21:55:34
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answer #3
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answered by Albannach 6
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Buddy, my theory on this is that you cant since it is a bitmap basically (i am assuming this is digital), since it is DIGITal, this means that there are pixels!! To make it grain free you would have to go to a verrry high resolution, and as for printers, i dont know, camera shops usually have nice ones.
2007-12-07 21:54:29
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answer #4
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answered by Meteor Crater Boy 2
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YOu must reduce the size to the point graininess does not occur.
2007-12-07 21:53:00
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answer #5
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answered by justbeingher 7
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