In an era where images are compressed through social media algorithms—losing their dynamic range and sharpness—the desire for the Rikitake "better" version is a desire for fidelity. Rikitake’s lenses (often prime lenses with wide apertures like f/1.2 or f/1.4) provide a bokeh (background blur) that separates the subject from the background with a creamy, cinematic quality that smartphone cameras and cheaper digital setups struggle to replicate.
Original Rikitake scans are often 800x600 pixels—unusable for wallpapers or prints. Rikitake108 uses AI-driven topology mapping (not simple upscaling) to rebuild the grain structure. The result? A 4K image that looks like it was shot yesterday, but retains the analog soul of a 35mm negative. portraits of jennie by yasushi rikitake108 better