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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
D600\D610 vs D800
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<blockquote data-quote="nmccamy" data-source="post: 217780" data-attributes="member: 17094"><p>If you guys think my idea of creating high definition photos is crazy, my perfectionism is really exposed with the idea that along with shooting up to 30 frames of combined rows and columns to create a single photograph, I will be doing exposure blending via bracketing, and focus blending for each frame. Insane!!!!!!! Well, not all frames will be focus blended, just those areas that show foreground details.</p><p></p><p>The number of frames per resulting photo could reach well over 100! Though, this is trivial compared to what I've seen others do. Max Lyons has done some far larger. It was his work that inspired me to pursue this.</p><p></p><p>And I'm NOT going to attempt to break the world's largest photograph record, that's for sure! Currently, it is the 320 gigapixel photograph of London. If printed at normal resolution, it would be 98 x 24 meters! Larger than Buckingham Palace! It took 3 days to shoot, using four Canon (Boo!) EOS 7D cameras with 400mm lenses, mounted on Rodeon automated pano heads at a rate of four frames per second. It took months to put the resulting photos together. Wow! It's fun looking for stitching errors in it, and there are quite a few!</p><p></p><p>Of course it was all a Canon publicity stunt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nmccamy, post: 217780, member: 17094"] If you guys think my idea of creating high definition photos is crazy, my perfectionism is really exposed with the idea that along with shooting up to 30 frames of combined rows and columns to create a single photograph, I will be doing exposure blending via bracketing, and focus blending for each frame. Insane!!!!!!! Well, not all frames will be focus blended, just those areas that show foreground details. The number of frames per resulting photo could reach well over 100! Though, this is trivial compared to what I've seen others do. Max Lyons has done some far larger. It was his work that inspired me to pursue this. And I'm NOT going to attempt to break the world's largest photograph record, that's for sure! Currently, it is the 320 gigapixel photograph of London. If printed at normal resolution, it would be 98 x 24 meters! Larger than Buckingham Palace! It took 3 days to shoot, using four Canon (Boo!) EOS 7D cameras with 400mm lenses, mounted on Rodeon automated pano heads at a rate of four frames per second. It took months to put the resulting photos together. Wow! It's fun looking for stitching errors in it, and there are quite a few! Of course it was all a Canon publicity stunt. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
D600\D610 vs D800
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