Jeremy Dueck Photography Inc.

Jeremy Dueck Photography - review albums, slide shows and proofs from your day

Thursday

Happy New Year

Happy New Year to all our clients and friends, may 2010 bring you closer to the ones you love.

Jeremy

Merry Christmas


Thanks to all our past clients and thank you to the ones in 2009 for making it a wonderful and enjoyable year! Happy Holiday Greetings! Spend some time with the ones that count, take a moment to realize how blessed you are. Season's Greetings!


Monday

World's Largest Photo

Check this out, the world's largest photo= 600 stitched shots, 18.4 billion pixels and 1 month of labor: http://bit.ly/5T8aQE]


The detail zooming in is pretty amazing.

Here are some FAQ about how Jeffrey Martin did it.

How did you create this panorama?

I used a Canon 5d mark 2 and a 70-200mm lens, set to 200mm. The camera was mounted on a robotic device which turned the camera in tiny, precise increments, in every direction. All together, 40 gigabytes of images were shot. These images were then stitched together using PTGui. The resulting panorama was adjusted for color, contrast, sharpness, etc. in Photoshop. Afterwards, the image was cut into lots of “tiles” and uploaded to our server. When you view the image online, you only load a few of these “tiles” at one time.

How long did you spend stitching this panorama?

Between loading the initial raw files into the computer, and having the panorama stitched, it took about a week. It took 3 additional weeks to fine-tune the image.

What kind of computer did you use?

I used a four year-old windows PC with two single-core 3ghz xeon processors and 8GB of RAM. After a week of frustration, I also bought an SSD, which helped to speed up some tasks a bit. If I will make this image again, I will buy a new computer.

What are the dimensions of this panorama, and the size it takes on disk?

The final image exists as a 120 gigabyte photoshop large (PSB) file. It cannot exist as a TIFF or JPEG file because of their size constraints. The panorama online exists as a few hundred thousand small tiles (in JPEG format), and they take up about 1 gigabyte of disk space.


Wednesday

World's Smallest Snowman


Check out this tinny snowman. He is 10 µm across, 1/5th the width of a human hair.




Friday

Lady Croft






Went out for coffee with fellow photographer Rebecca Croft. Stopped by her studio only to see a ring light. Had to try it out.

This was complete spur of the moment shooting, I didn't even warn Rebecca - so thanks to her for being a good sport. : ) I just had to try the light.

Not sure if this was my favorite version of a ring light. But it was cool.