Zoomify works great; I hadn't used it for a couple years and liked it then. Looks like it has improved quite a bit.
Zoomify works great; I hadn't used it for a couple years and liked it then. Looks like it has improved quite a bit.
That would be a nice feature to have on your website. I think I'm going to look into zoomify.
Played around a little with gigapan.com. Works nicely, but is geared more towards their own products and not integration into your own product. I do like the fullscreen option though, really shows off the image well and works quick and intuitively. I uploaded one image to test it : http://www.gigapan.com/gigapans/6154...57f53b508f8e38
Too bad zoomify has no trial mode.
A puny body weakens the soul.
Paul Cezanne
I should have clarified something. I still believe a tool like this is ineffective for someone just trying to show a lot of detail in a print for sale, for example. But if you are using it educationally, like on instructional site concerning an elaborate architectural space, or simply to preview a massive print project via stitching, it does seem useful. If I was interested in comparing the ornamentation of naves of various cathedrals like the one illustrated, I would be nice way to do it. And like I already said, I know people who show their restorations of major projects to potential new clients in this manner, though they tend to use MF digital cameras from the
get-go. One more tool in the kit, for when you need it.
I wouldn't use it for an art photo, as the composition/presentation as a whole is the important thing. Like Gigapan, it's good for panoramas.
I agree that it is not useful for showing the level of detail in a print, just like showing a bunch of images on a website doesn't show the depth a print can have. It is useful to illustrate the level of detail large format can bring though. I wouldn't do it with every image, but maybe one or two, to give people a feel of what LF can do and how it differs from a snapshot. Most people that I show my work to have no clue what a truly high resolution is, most just know the DSLR and P&S and do question why I go through all the trouble of bringing such a big camera on long walks.
A puny body weakens the soul.
Paul Cezanne
Around 10 years ago, I did it on my own website like this, just for one image, to give a sense of the detail in an 8x10" negative:
http://www.davidagoldfarb.com/photo/imviaduct.htm
With current bandwidth and screen sizes, I could go larger, but that's what made sense at the time.
I agree that as the prevalence of smaller and smaller screens becomes more commonplace it will be more difficult to express image quality only achievable with large format. Indeed, as more people become accustomed to viewing images on their phones or small devices like the iPad, they also become less critical about image quality. It is rare these days that people even look at a picture in any other venue than on those tiny things.
I did view your images on my desktop system, which has two LARGE 24" HD flatscreen monitors.
All I can say is WOW!
The images are fantastic. The level of detail (even though the others say it still does not show the full capability of LF) is very good.
I like it!
Whiskey Is Sunlight Held Together By Water
If you mean the super 8K model of the BetterLight digital scan back, here are links to a 2.8 Gigapixel panoramic image using their super 6K model (less super than model super 8K), with 4x5 view camera captured in 2008 by Mike Collette - the inventor of the scan back.
http://www.betterlight.com/gigapixel.html
This is the same image in full resolution for details with the Zoomify viewer:
http://www.betterlight.com/zoomify/zoom_panamint.html
Enjoy
Last edited by NickyLai; 1-Sep-2014 at 07:40. Reason: typo
I have seen a few of those images. They are very detailed. My personal preference is images of cities, where the immense detail is really needed. I think the last one I saw was of London.
Who's going to shoot Chicago?
What I was actually referring to was, ScFi novels that talked of interactive surround video in living rooms. The people on the walls would talk back...
Tin Can
I wonder if it may happen in an image captured with the Lytro camera, when they can make it into LF. Their image is shot first focus later interactively. The viewer click to focus a point in the image, if background sound added properly it will be like talking back to you when clicked
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