Ian Grant
Subscriber
Just imagine what you could do using a scanned 8x10 negative.
I said that earlier in the thread

After about 13 or 14 hours the program is still hung at 1% up-sizing a small 6mb photo by 6x.
Ian
Just imagine what you could do using a scanned 8x10 negative.
Thanks for the clarification. My reaction to your pre and post Giga shots was simply which looked clearer and in looking so did not seem to lose anything in return for the clearer lookI wasn't actually looking for which image "looked better" as a finished image, but rather which had more fidelity to the original image, whether it looked good or not. .
Giga is much less expensive compared to Photoshop, so for those interested it's certainly worth your while to give it a free trial.
My partner is a master knitter, she writes patterns, judges knitting competitions and is the product development manager for the last commercial wool mill in Australia. When home knitting machines became widely available it was predicted that hand knitting would die, after all, with a skilled operator a knitting machine produces flawless knitting. Guess what? Hand knitting is huge and machine knitting is a niche market at best. The OP doesn’t seem to understand the difference between a technicaly “perfect” digital print and a hand made wet print, we are talking about apples and oranges. Some people are happy sitting in front of a computer, good for them, but I, and many others prefer the process to be a little more tactile. It’s always funny when someone makes an absurd absolute statement and then get defensive when people don’t agree. The OP, I think, enjoys stirring the pot, like Alfred said “some people just like to watch the world burn”
Well I'm trying it and it's hung at 1%. I have excellent resizing software works well up-sizing but my use id for downsizing for Internet use.
Reminds me of the people in the 60's & 70's who said using micro film in a 35mm camera gave LF quality, and then Tech Pan would make LF obsolete, they were so naive because Tech Pan was also available as LF sheet film
So if this miracle software actually worked (still 30+ mins at 1%), I could use it to up-size my 10x8 negative scans (already 1gb and B&W)
Ian
Great point. (big snip) I will keep on using film cameras as long as I wish.
Great point. I remember that and people were running around in circles, crying their eyes out, shouting "We are doomed We are doomed!! How will I ever sell my knitting needles!" An yet yarns are still available and knitting machines are a smaller market. I will keep on using film cameras as long as I wish.
My partner is a master knitter, she writes patterns, judges knitting competitions and is the product development manager for the last commercial wool mill in Australia. When home knitting machines became widely available it was predicted that hand knitting would die, after all, with a skilled operator a knitting machine produces flawless knitting. Guess what? Hand knitting is huge and machine knitting is a niche market at best. The OP doesn’t seem to understand the difference between a technicaly “perfect” digital print and a hand made wet print, we are talking about apples and oranges. Some people are happy sitting in front of a computer, good for them, but I, and many others prefer the process to be a little more tactile. It’s always funny when someone makes an absurd absolute statement and then get defensive when people don’t agree. The OP, I think, enjoys stirring the pot, like Alfred said “some people just like to watch the world burn”
My mother could knit, read, and drink coffee simultaneously. I take great care with the quilts and afghans she made.My partner is a master knitter, she writes patterns, judges knitting competitions and is the product development manager for the last commercial wool mill in Australia. When home knitting machines became widely available it was predicted that hand knitting would die, after all, with a skilled operator a knitting machine produces flawless knitting. Guess what? Hand knitting is huge and machine knitting is a niche market at best. The OP doesn’t seem to understand the difference between a technicaly “perfect” digital print and a hand made wet print, we are talking about apples and oranges. Some people are happy sitting in front of a computer, good for them, but I, and many others prefer the process to be a little more tactile. It’s always funny when someone makes an absurd absolute statement and then get defensive when people don’t agree. The OP, I think, enjoys stirring the pot, like Alfred said “some people just like to watch the world burn”
Things made by hand are special and worth keeping.My mother could knit, read, and drink coffee simultaneously. I take great care with the quilts and afghans she made.
I live close to a Amish community, we seem to cross paths at the 2nd hand stores, grocery etc. I'm always so impressed with the fact that their clothes fit and are so lovely. I suspect that I have 10 times the inventory of clothes as these folks with 1/10 that truly fit. Thus mass produced anything vs. a handmade article.
Call me stupid - "You're stupid!" - but what am I supposed to be looking at with the OP's post, other than a photo and a crop from it?
Call me stupid - "You're stupid!" - but what am I supposed to be looking at with the OP's post, other than a photo and a crop from it?
End of the road for medium and large format eh? I can do it all on a smaller 35mm slr you say?
Neat. I didn't know anyone was making cheap but well made ... [looking up some comparison charts...] 25mm f/0.9 lenses?
The 20mm f/0.8 lens sounds really impressive too!
Something tells me that people claiming the death of large and medium format photography may not have done a great deal of large or medium format photography...
35mm is for chumps.
16mm is where it's at.
Lots of cheap and readily available 15mm f/0.5 lenses for 16mm cameras? Neat.![]()
Not really a "film is dead" post. The OP likes to think he has an amazing esoteric understanding of the photographic process and "the arts" in general, he loves to put a post up that will incite the peasants. It's how he gets his kicks."End of road for MF/LF... "
Oh look, another 'film is dead' post. How twee.
Not really a "film is dead" post. The OP likes to think he has an amazing esoteric understanding of the photographic process and "the arts" in general, he loves to put a post up that will incite the peasants. It's how he gets his kicks.
I make gigapixel images for wall commercial indoor wall murals measured in many feet by many feet. There are limits to what interpolation can do. When I need to create really large commercial indoor wall murals that I've made, neither ULF film nor any up-rez software works for pin-sharp murals for in0room up close viewing (sometimes a visitor center, sometimes a ug building lobby etc), the only way to do it right and well is shooting a matrix and and stitching, which (at least for static subjects) I fully automate using a Gigapixel Pro and StitchEFX. Even when not making large murals things start to get muddy very quickly using any other method. I'm sure this SW is an improvement for when folks need to crop heavily and get a better result, but again, there are limits. Want to really find out? Take a single 36MP or 46MP capture and use this SW or any SW to enlarge that single frame to say, 10x30 feet and then view it in actual size in Photoshop or whatever you'll still see only blotches. Now for images viewed at bill-board distance that will suffice, but as I said, there are real limits otherwise.
MFL
Leave the poor porpoises out of this!
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |