Claire Senft said:
The more I think about this project the goofier it sounds. If the area in width is 4 miles then there will be very considerable height involved. If what is being contemplated is a very narrow height for a vey long print, then I would suspect that the print will have a considerable viewing distance.
Claire, thank you for replying. You may want to go back to my two original post and re-read it to see what I am actually attempting to do vs. what you assume I am attempting to do. The end result needs to be a high-resolution digital file. I am posting on APUG because I intend to use a film camera and because the depth of knowledge here on APUG is deep indeed.
The client showed me several 600dpi scans of reference prints of the subject (they need updated photographs made from the same viewpoint to depict changes in the land use. They could see this from space but it makes comparison to the reference images much harder). The images were made in the late 80's using a Tachihara 4x5 on Kodak Vericolor VPN using a 135mm f5.6 Nikkor or Rodenstock Sironar of the same FL, a tripod and polarizer, and printed on a Mitsubishi paper.
So what I attempting to do better than is: a single 4x5 photograph, made using careful technique, of a vista about 3.5 miles wide. In the scan of the print of this image, you can see houses and they appear as white fuzzy rectangles. The client will be happy if the houses appear as rectangles with sharp edges and with the ability to distinguish a roofline, a window, a chimmney, etc from the rest of the structure.
Since the location is subject to winds and less than favorable atmospherics, my main concern is becoming
getting the shot. Thanks to the input from this group I am beginning to believe that with:
- The best medium format optics
- The sharpest medium format color slide film
- Immaculate technique
- Ideal weather/light conditions
- High quality film scanning
- Effective use of software sharpening tools
I can acheive a result that betters the original shots, meets and maybe exceeds the client expectations. Testing will confirm or deny my lunacy!
Thanks to all the on-topic contributions! I've learned a lot already and my initial tests will be more likely to succeed thanks to your contributions. BTW, for my initial tests I've decided to attempt the stitched image approach first and I will be testing 2 vertical shots with my Fuji GW690III and then a grid of 6 frames (2hx3w) using a borrowed Mamiya 6 w/ 150mm lens; Provia film; 4800dpi scans.
--Philip.