Quote:
Originally Posted by Dude111
But they dont look at natural looking Mate...I have seen some digital prints and they have a very rough look.. (Maybe its how they were done)
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But you can change that if you have something like Photoshop (and others). Load the raw image in and adjust it to how you want it. You can soften it, harden it adjust low-mid-high lighted areas etc.
When you had a camera you bought a film, took your pictures and the took the film to a store to develop and print them.
Forgetting Polorids , which as Chris says were a novelty. you take your film in ( or send it off ) to be developed and printed. The machine that did it is set at "one for all". It didn't care if one frame was over or under exposed it just developed all frames the same and printed them.
I have in the past taken over and underexposed negatives, scanned them and produced high quality prints from them thanks to the digital platform. The people I did it for were over the moon as in quite a few cases they were of family gone. It was not a business but a hobby and friends asked if I could do it. Maximum charge:- buy me a pint next time you see me.