Is this good enough? No cropping, pretty much as it came out of the camera; a little sky darkening. I have a 13 x 19 print (the largest my printer can make) that looks as good as what you see on the screen.
Many thanks for your prompt reply
Larry
Really nice print!
Many thanks,
Larry
Larry, I went to Best Buy yesterday and held the RX100VI and it has a nice feel and fast focus $1099.
Fredrick
Loc: Former NYC, now San Francisco Bay Area
Dickbas wrote:
I have a 1” sensor RX-10 MkIII and have printed 60”x40” canvases that have both sold.
Here is a photo of both canvas printed @36”x48” in front of my 65” LED TV. Resolution makes “the print feel like you could take one step forward and be right there” according to one of my clients!
They look great! In listening to folks here talk about resolution and print size limitations this past year, I wonder how many of them have actually printed large prints and been disappointed by the results, resolution wise? I mean “actually“ to have done that with an image from their camera? The larger the print, the further away you should be viewing it. Do you eyeball a large painting? They look like crap.
I just had an 11 X 14 print done from an iPhone image. Came out beautiful. My advice to folks is to stop worrying so much about this. Do a test with one of your images and actually see the results. If you don’t like the resolution, buy software like ON1 Resize, for example, which does a great job of re-interpolating the resolution of your image to whatever you want.
Just my two cents.
Thanks, I thought the feel was good also.
Larry
Thanks, I thought the feel was good also
Thanks, the ON1 is a good suggestion.
Larry
Thanks, those photos are impressive!
I have an rx100 m3 I have a beautiful AZ landscape enlarged as a metal print to 16 x 24 and it looks great. Low light and high iso will be a little noisy but well lit shots.... not a problem... I will add that it is a great little camera. I typically shoot in raw and manual mode with it and the results are consistently quite good.. Would love to grad a m6 or 7 for the extra reach maybe someday
timbuktutraveler wrote:
This is good news!
Could you tell me what the term FULL OUT means?
Many thanks for your prompt reply.
Larry
I believe he means FULL FRAME, which means using the entire image with no cropping. An 8 X 10 must be cropped, an 8 X 12 uses the full image of a standard sensor.
many thanks for your prompt reply
many thanks for your reply.
billnikon
Loc: Pennsylvania/Ohio/Florida/Maui/Oregon/Vermont
timbuktutraveler wrote:
This is good news!
Could you tell me what the term FULL OUT means?
Many thanks for your prompt reply.
Larry
Most camera's default is 2:3 aspect ratio. So if you multiply each of those numbers by 2 you get 4X6, again by 2 you get 8X12 as so on and so on.
It is also referred to as full out because at that aspect ratio you are printing out the whole frame, or everything you see when looking through the viewfinder.
Many camera's have different aspect ratio's to choose from, but I like this one. check your camera manual for more aspect ratio's.
interesting! thanks for your reply
Larry
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