Old vs New - Daguerreotype vs. Digital
Posted: Wed 14 Jan 2015, 17:36
I was reading about the detail present in daguerreotypes and came across this link (apologies if someone has previously posted it in the past). http://www.rochester.edu/news/photos/daguerreotype.html
This digital capture of just one of a set of photographs of the 1848 Cincinnati waterfront is said to be equivalent to a 140,000 MP image. Interestingly you need computerised treatment of the image to get the full detail.
Similarly I understand that large glass-backed photographic plates are still in use for some astronomical/scientific applications where high resolution detail over a large area is paramount, if Wikipedia is correct.
Not proposing anyone moves to this early Victorian tech, just amused than in moving to the much more usable paper and film photo-technologies a significant attribute was diminished. The innovation path has never been smooth.
Graham
This digital capture of just one of a set of photographs of the 1848 Cincinnati waterfront is said to be equivalent to a 140,000 MP image. Interestingly you need computerised treatment of the image to get the full detail.
Similarly I understand that large glass-backed photographic plates are still in use for some astronomical/scientific applications where high resolution detail over a large area is paramount, if Wikipedia is correct.
Not proposing anyone moves to this early Victorian tech, just amused than in moving to the much more usable paper and film photo-technologies a significant attribute was diminished. The innovation path has never been smooth.
Graham