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April 29, 2006

Oakland's Magnificent Paramount Theater

I booked a private tour today with the intention of shooting a couple of panoramas of the interior of this gorgeous theater. When I saw just how dark it is inside, I was a bit worried. However, I am anything but disappointed with the results. Even though every image was a time exposure of several seconds, the camera's noise reduction produced excellent results.

paramount_lobby_sample_1_4000.jpg

I haven't yet taken the time to generate panoramas from the camera RAW files - these were stitched together from JPEG's, so the quality is not what it could be. (Those blown-out highlights on the stage curtain for example.) I just could not wait to share the results! I'll update the images when I recreate them from the RAW files. UPDATE: The image below has been updated. This version was made from the RAW files.

paramount_theater_sample_1_.jpg

You will probably not be surprised to learn that one or both of these will soon be printed nine or ten feet wide. Stay tuned for more! :)

Posted by thedude at 4:09 PM | Comments (3)

April 26, 2006

Gorgeous Aerial Photography - Wow!

I'm uploading a link to this page so that I can look at it again and enjoy these extraordinary images! This photographer makes excellent use of PhotoShop by adding a not-so-subtle vignette to the images. I need to try this technique.

Posted by thedude at 9:57 AM | Comments (1)

April 16, 2006

Printing Large - Again

I know I keep saying this, but it's truly amazing what you can do with a digital camera and an on-line digital printing service like Pictopia. A few years ago it would have cost thousands to do something like this. Today I can get a nine-foot-wide print for 250 bucks with a few mouse-clicks. Amazing!

3rd_floor_print.jpg 3rd_floor_patti.jpg

Posted by thedude at 1:56 PM | Comments (3)

April 12, 2006

This Saves Me a Bundle

Recently I have been toying with the idea of buying a color printer. Epson and HP make some fine printers that offer superior quality to any traditional printing methods. I'm pretty picky about my images, and thought that this would be the cheapest way to share prints of my favorite images with friends and family. I was wrong.

I worked the numbers and found that large-ish prints of my images would cost 5 to 7 bucks per page and consume a LOT of my valuable time. I looked for alternatives, and eventually decided to give MyPublisher.com a try. So, I pulled together 20 random images on Saturday afternoon and layed out my first photo book. I wanted to see the best they had to offer, so I ordered a Deluxe Hardcover book. 70 bucks for 20 large images bound together seems pretty reasonable, I thought. Still, my expectations were low. I knew that the CMYK printing process has inherent shortcomings, I expected the colors to be flat, I didn't expect the paper to be heavy enough or have a nice enough coating, etc. I thought that the results might be OK, but certainly did not expect them to be great.

Laying out the book was simple. The easy-to-use software offers 15 different page layouts, including a full-bleed single-image-per-page format. This format is the most important to me, because it means I can use my favorite layout tools to create individual pages and export those pages as perfectly sized single images. I can place pictures and text anywhere I want and use any typeface I choose.

book_1.jpg book_2.jpg
book_3.jpg book_4.jpg

Well, the results blew me away. There are so many things to like about this book! The color and clarity are both excellent. Whites are bright, blacks are smooth and solid, flesh-tones near perfect. The binding is also perfect, (pun intended) the paper is sturdy and has a lustrous coating. This book looks totally professional. It's way better than "good enough".

On the negative side, laying out whole pages - with text embedded in the page-size image - has some limitations. This seems to be because the images display tiny compression artifacts where the "real" text does not. The closeup of the text above looks far worse than it does "in person". In fact, the artifacts are barely noticeable, but they can cause text-as-part-of-an-image to look a bit soft. I may be able to reduce this problem by laying text on a 10% gray background. We'll see when I order my next book from MyPublisher.com!

Highly recommended!

Posted by thedude at 6:43 PM | Comments (2)

April 7, 2006

Another Nice Panorama by Grant

Even though this panorama was shot "with a tiny Canon SD500 on a crappy overcast day", Grant's image of the Shoshone Falls in Twin Falls, Idaho works for me!

Shoshone_pano.jpg

Posted by thedude at 10:32 AM | Comments (0)

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