i just got into film photography recently and purchased a v300 epson to scan my film, what my question is what dpi should i be scanning at? when do the diminishing returns occur? like when is the dpi so much that its just taking too long and not useful? iam most likely going to be only printing 5x7's but may print a 8x10 here and there, but i dont mind rescanning a single negative for 8x10 alone
What film are you using? What lens? What camera? It all matters.
Lets take an example.....
Ilford Delta 100 is rated at 160l/mm. Assuming you can actually resolve that (nice rangefinder with Zeiss glass gets close), that is 4064 l/inch. A 35mm frame is 0.94488189 inches by 1.41732283 which means about 3840x5443 pixels. Scanning at 3600dpi gets you 3402x5102 which is dang close. Anything more and you are wasting your time and hard drive space. Anything less and you are not getting the maximum out of this film/camera/lens combination.
Every film has a different lines per millimeter resolution. Every lens has different l/mm resolving power. Different cameras decrease the resolving power differently (rangefinders tend to be better because the lens is closer to the film plane, some SLRs use vacuum to hold the film perfectly flat, etc etc etc).
If you want to play it safe, Delta 100 has one of the highest l/mm out there so just scan everything at 3600dpi and be done with it. That results in about 17mp or so on 35mm, 72mp for 6x6 medium format, and 260mp for 4x5 large format.
Allan
PS. Of course this all assumes you scanner can actually resolve 3600 dpi well, heh.