Absolutely, as many LCD monitor has D-range of 1000:1 or more today.
C.H.Ling
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chuck Norcutt"
>I think the difference is transmitted rather than reflected light. A
> large monitor looks very good too.
>
> Chuck Norcutt
>
> C.H.Ling wrote:
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Andrew Dacey"
>>
>>> With a slide you get a really good d-max in the super black blacks
>>> the slide film will produce, and in the same shot you can also have
>>> clear film base d-min, that's a pretty large dynamic range.
>>>
>>> But in terms of exposure, you're going to hit those brick walls of d-
>>> min and d-max reasonably quickly (and a lot less quickly than with
>>> print film). I think that's part of the look of slide film and part
>>> of why it looks so good (when done properly), you're essentially
>>> expanding the dynamic range of the scene when you capture it on film.
>>
>> I'm not sure, I believe why slides look so good because it resemble what
>> we
>> see so it is neither expanding nor compressing the scene (except at
>> extreme
>> ends which are out of slide's capture range), that's why it look so
>> 'real'.
>>
>> C.H.Ling - looking at some slides and doing wild guessing.
>>
--
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