I used the QTR step wedge script, photoshop and a 21 step wedge (included with the tool)
Yes, it gets very tricky near the toes.
Below is curve for ilford warmtone and output chart. Don't worry about the image it is something random without level adjustment.
I hope to start building a tool that creates a lut based off of a gradient that you would crop to size and the software would read automatically.
This is amazing! Wow. Tempted to have a go myself. If I could run the screen from a Raspberry Pi I could chuck some software together.
You could invert the image (to a positive) to compose then flip. Wow. Now to find a screen, and enlarger to use
This is really inspiring thanks for sharing.
So all I need is the screen, Raspberry Pi, driver board and cables and a big enlarger? Or a copy stand and I build and enlarger head. I guess I just need to focus the light.
Hmm. Where to find an enlarger.
Can you expand upon the last bit please?That's right. I even built myself an enlarger for that from wood. Works fine, it is even decently adjustable. My setup:
Light source: led strips in a light box
Lens: Large format lens, I'm using Nikkor 210mm which covers the whole screen without vignetting. Hint: Sinar lenses are cheap because you don't need shutter and aperture can be set fixed.
You need to make python script or other to "expand" your image; The RGB values contain each one true pixel as in display pixels, so you need to "pack" those into the RGB.
Can you expand upon the last bit please?
Do you mean combine the three channels into one, taking RGB and creating one greyscale pixel?
Ahh ok. So the first pixel’s red value is the 255 value of the first pixel of the image. The first pixels green value is the 255 value of the second pixel of the image etc. Ok, it will be fun to make a dynamic unwrapping function to cope with different sized images and handle interpolation. Hmm. Yeah this’ll be fun. I like the idea of that 12k screen also.
Thanks for the feedback @avandesande - I think Ill just go ahead and order the driver and the lcd and see where the journey takes me
From what I can tell, the 6.8" 9K LCD is just a single grid. I ordered one a couple months ago but it has been stuck in customs so I can't verify results yet with this LCD.
How did you see this?
Right! I was wondering - how about pixels - do you observe those in the print? Looking at this guy's experiments, it appears like pixels are visible (different workflow though): https://hackaday.io/project/171069-digital-picture-to-analog-darkroom-print
Fun fact the manufacturer was familiar with this thread!
I've been thinking about an approach for large prints where a flashed/developed film is epoxied to the LCD (probably bottom). You would focus on the grain in the film instead of the grid lines. This would allow large prints to 'break up' naturally.
Do you mean expose the film so that grain is left on the film? Like mid-gray? Focusing on the grain would then cause a the digital one to be a bit out of focus and then masked with sharp grain?
That's the idea, I would try it with tape first though
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