![]() ![]() So it is still popular to shoot large format film and scan the film digitally. Even in this digital age, large format film can contain the equivalent of hundreds of megapixels. There is also a great bevy of enthusiasts who continue to shoot medium and large format film. While high-end digital cameras can capture something like 20 megapixels these days, the ubiquitous cameras that most people use are not up to the quality that we color geeks are expecting. Heck - even CHROMiX doesn't bother to advertise our scanner profiling service on our website.īut, to borrow the colloquialism: the "reports of the death of scanning were greatly exaggerated." Like a lot of predictions about the future, this one has not materialized as anticipated. Two years ago when X-Rite released i1Profiler, their long awaited replacement to their professional profiling engines, it did not even include a module for making scanner profiles. Scanning targets have been getting harder to find. ![]() There certainly didn't seem to be much of a future in scanning. 1.2 Scanning the target on your scannerĪs digital cameras started to develop larger CCD chips, somebody pointed out that cameras were capable of the higher resolutions like flatbed scanners, and scanning was on its way out. ![]()
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