keithwms
Member
I don't think it's an issue of detail at all- you compose for the final product. A well conceived and executed small print will offer lots of detail, you won't miss a thing. I mean, look at Kertész, I have a book of tiny prints from him and they are amazing. And if the size causes you to hold the print a bit closer, to move it around in your hands... well that the whole point of making an intimate print. You can't hold a 16x20 in your hands and appreciate it in the same way- a print that large is fundamentally a gallery print to be viewed by many at once from a distance. That distance between the work and the audience is what troubles me about large prints- and it's not just a physical distance. I am just picturing some of Weston's intimate prints at 20x24, that would probably be quite awful.
Now, I have some captures that would absolutely suck in very small print (6x9cm or smaller), but that is an issue of composing for the print. The compositions aren't intimate so of course neither is the print, and I didn't shoot them to be printed small.
Incidentally, I thnk this touches on the problem of how to make prints that look appealing in web format. Did you ever notice how some people here seem to be masters at creating prints that look gorgeous even as thumbnails?! Frustrating for me
Like your chapel, Paul. That thing holds up at any size. I betcha want to print it huge, right? Don't.
Now, I have some captures that would absolutely suck in very small print (6x9cm or smaller), but that is an issue of composing for the print. The compositions aren't intimate so of course neither is the print, and I didn't shoot them to be printed small.
Incidentally, I thnk this touches on the problem of how to make prints that look appealing in web format. Did you ever notice how some people here seem to be masters at creating prints that look gorgeous even as thumbnails?! Frustrating for me

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