View allAll Photos Tagged megapixels
Nikon D3300:
An APS-C sensor with 24 megapixels = great match factor
for capturing light in night photography.
Less pixels on a decent sized sensor allows for larger pixel buckets to capture light at night.
The sensor size is ideal for this much berated Nikkor lens.
Together they make a wonderful DOF.
On the news - The image consists of 8430 photos taken with a 100-megapixel camera. The image has 717 billion pixels, so the distance between two pixels on the canvas is 5 micrometers (0.005 millimeters). The canvas of De Nachtwacht is 3.63 meters by 4.37 meters in size. If you would like to save the file on a computer, you will need 5.6 terabytes of free space.
You prolly woun't get an idea about the amazing Megapixel this photo has by just looking at this flickr upload. the original file has dimension of 37785 x 8227 which is approximately equivalent to 310 MEGAPIXEL. btw this is not a Gigapan.
The photo has such an amazing details.Just to give you an idea i have posted a zoomed in part below.
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my photos are available at
NOTE: All images are Copyrighted by Asad Gilani. No rights to use are given or implied to the viewer. All rights of ownership and use remain with the copyright own.
20000x9000, 180 megapixel, multi-row panorama of Waddesdon Manor.
18 images were used to create this panorama.
Taken on a nodal rail to eliminate any parallax errors and stitched using PTGui Pro. A white card was used for accurate white balance.
Original file size was 1.2gb! Uploaded jpeg is 110mb in size.
Hiking down the Hidden Lake trail in Glacier National Park, a pack of big horn sheep decided to run down the path with us before stopping at this point to graze. Four of the sheep point out in each direction as they protected the pack while eating. It was an amazing sight to behold. The backdrop of the Glacier mountains made it all that more special. I didn't have time to change lenses, so I stuck with my trusty 16-35mm wide angle and just snapped away hoping that I would catch something decent. The great thing about 42 megapixels is that you can crop down and still get great resolution.
There were some shadows I had to open up especially around the animals but the rest is pretty much straight out of the camera.
Mike D.
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A four picture panorama stitch of the American Falls at midday, resulting in a 63 megapixel panorama of the natural wonder just north of Buffalo, NY. Of course, all of those megapixels don't mean much in this image downsized to 800 pixels wide :-) #etbtsy
Why midday? Well, while the golden hours of the dawn and dusk are great, we don't live and see the world only during those times, do we?
As a little follow on from the image I posted yesturday this is the same beach in Vik just 24hrs later so It's fair to say the weather in Iceland is changeable. Generally once the clouds drop and the side ways sets in you might as well put your feet up and stay in doors.
Or if you're confident your camera kit is weather sealed you can venture out for some seriously moody photography.
You might even find two hardy souls enjoying a wind swept walk along the shoreline!
No, I did not need the 50 megapixel of this camera to make this picture, 20 would have been fine, but from time to time I go over the settings and Bruce or Calypso are always there to help me. You do have the risk of having to clean the front of the lens when your that close.
Thanks for all the faves and comments, even for just taking the time to view my photo's, much appreciated.
If I give faves, then most of the time they are not given in a "blink of an eye", I like to look at details to see how much they enriched a photo and how they draw my attention, to everyone "keep up the great/nice/good-looking/wonderful work of photography".
One drawback of using high megapixel cameras is that your hard drives are filling up very fast and you will quickly find yourself being out of space. So one day I found myself going through the archives after files I should have discarded a long time ago. I know I have many of them I will never use but I hate the tedious decision making goin through every file. During this process, which by the way is a neverendig story, I stumbled on a pic from a visit to my family in Austria some years ago. Somehow I never bothered to do anything about it. So I found the perfect excuse to postpone the boring search and plunge into a much more pleasing pursuit reminding me of times long ago when I would try to find any excuse to postpone studying for an exam. even cleaning the dorm would suffice. www.ludwigriml.com
ENG: A wonderful 48 megapixel view from the 1838 meter high Breitenberg, across the Kesselmoos to the Aggenstein. The Aggenstein is a 1986 m high mountain in the Allgäu Alps and Tyrol directly on the border of Germany and Austria. There it is located in the Bavarian part of the Tannheimer mountains a few kilometers south of the town of Pfronten in Germany and Vils in Austria.
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GER: Ein wunderbarer 48 Megapixel Blick vom 1838 Meter hohen Breitenberg, quer übers Kesselmoos zum Aggenstein. Der Aggenstein ist ein 1986 m ü. A. hoher Berg in den Allgäuer Alpen und Tirol direkt auf der Grenze von Deutschland und Österreich. Dort befindet er sich im bayerischen Teil der Tannheimer Berge wenige Kilometer südlich von der Stadt Pfronten in Deutschland sowie Vils in Österreich.
Kodak DC280. 2 megapixel, 120 dpi, point and shoot digital camera. www.dpreview.com/reviews/kodakdc280
With a Hoya 72 filter held in front of the lens, the camera was IR capable.
My first digital camera. At the time it was very expensive. Around $500.00. U.S. I still have it. Still works. Cant transfer images onto any computer after OS WIN XP.
No crop. No post processing.
Currently on a photo trip to Öland with Magnus. Friday morning sunrise at the lighthouse Långe Erik captured with a 2.1 Mpix Sony DSC-F55 camera from 1999.
99-photo multi-row HDR panorama. 34,944 x 18,386. (642 megapixels.)
Today's photo is my last panorama of Horseshoe Bend and my favorite of the set. This was taken about 250m from the other panos.
I packed up my tripod thinking that I was done taking panos for the day. Jess and I walked around the northern part of the bend, spending some time together enjoying the view. The scene seemed to change rapidly as we traveled along the rim. Before heading back, I ultimately decided to reassemble the tripod for one last shot.
My gear
Canon EF50mm f/1.2L USM lens (w/ hood)
Hoya UV filter (sometimes I use a polarizer)
iFOOTAGE TC7 Carbon Fiber Tripod w/ Quick Fastbowl
Acratech Multi-row panoramic head
EOS R/R5 compatible mounting plate
Software
Color Fidelity Color Profiles for Canon EOS R5
Some of these links are referral links; buying from them will send me a couple bucks. Thanks for your support.
A 30 megapixel panorama created from 5 images with my compact Olympus mirrorless MFT camera. While editing found to much negative space and decided to add the moon. Something fool!
Technical Info: Olympus OM-D EM5, 12-50mm f3.5-6.3 @ 12mm, handheld, ISO: 200, Mode: Manual, f/8, 1/350 sec, Stitch 5 images and edited on Photoshop CC.
108-photo multi-row HDR panorama. 35,605 x 18,276. (650 megapixels.)
A little bit after sunrise. Sky starting to fill in with beatiful clouds over a deep blue background.
In the previous two photos that I shared of Horseshoe Bend, I had to crop the fully stitched image below ~512 megapixels in order to import into Lightroom. This resulted in a lot of the sky being removed as well as some of the edges of the canyon.
This photo's sky had fantastic clouds and color; I wasn't prepared to simply crop it off, so I had to go back to the drawing board.
After trying a few different methods, I ended up processing this almost the same as the last two shots in PTGui, but instead of cropping and then going back to LR, I cut the photo in half and took each half into LR. I processed each half separately and then reassembled.
This probably took around 3 or 4 hours to process since I had some trouble slicing and reassembling the photo properly.
My gear
Canon EF50mm f/1.2L USM lens (w/ hood)
Hoya UV filter (sometimes I use a polarizer)
iFOOTAGE TC7 Carbon Fiber Tripod w/ Quick Fastbowl
Acratech Multi-row panoramic head
EOS R/R5 compatible mounting plate
Software
Color Fidelity Color Profiles for Canon EOS R5
Some of these links are referral links; buying from them will send me a couple bucks. Thanks for your support.
The Idaho Falls LDS Temple is seen across the Snake River on a beautiful, calm morning. This is a mosiac of four 12.5 megapixel images. Please click inside to see the details of how the image was produced.
View large - 'Glory in the Morning' On Black
View the - Idaho Set
View the - Mosaic, Vertorama, Panorama Set
View the - Snake River Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
I've had this phone for just about 8 months, and I still can't believe its capabilities. This is taken with the macro lens, but another taken with a normal lens, but at 108 megapixels is equally or more detailed. Hand held. Yes, it is a boring picture. The watch was found in my father's possessions after he died. Doesn't really work, but I've hung onto it anyway.
Das Dorf Stelle in Niedersachsen.
An HP Photosmart C618 camera from the flea market for €5.
2.1MP CCD with a Pentax zoom lens.
Self-portrait using a Fuji X-Pro1 and being economical with the light (and the megapixels). This camera does not have face recognition. A shot like this has to be done manually. I actually prefer it this way. In situations like this one also does not need 30, 40 or even 60 MP sensors as the current generation of high-end digital cameras would offer. 16 MP, as this camera has, is plenty. And my dream camera is indeed an older one, the 18MP Leica M9.
(Image taken with a 6 Megapixel DSLR, the Canon 10D).
What a wonderful place to hike with many multi-use trails. 6 miles of trails will take you through habitats such as sand pine scrub, pine Flatwoods, sandhill, and bayhead swamp.
(Spanish): Panorama del Lago Proctor, un pequeño lago pero con un hermoso area y 8 kilometros de veredas que llevan a uno por muchos diversos ecosistemas).
(Camera: Canon 10D, Canon EF 28-105mm f/3.5-4.5 II).
(Process: Panorama made from 12 vertical images really close together on manual mode @ 28mm on the tripod)
(Location: Lake Proctor Wilderness Area, Geneva, Florida).
This image from my Album: Florida Woodlands..
208 Megapixel, 27000 x 6600 Panorama of Blenheim Palace.
A nodal rail was utilised to eliminate any parallax issues for a perfect stitch using PTGui Pro.
Taken with one of my first pocket, low-megapixel digital cameras, several years back. So certainly not ideal. But it was such a beautiful scene. I did what I could with it.
For those of you not familiar with the valley, El Capitan is on the left, and Cathedral Rocks are on the right, with Bridalveil fall just to their right.
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If Google Photos had not reminded me of this photo I took a decade-and-a-half ago, I would have completely forgotten about it—I can't even remember taking it.
That beauty here is Ogi (pronounced as Og-hee), a very smart orange tabby at my parents' place, showing off his climbing and jumping skills.
Taken with Pentax K100D Super 6 megapixel digital camera and smc Pentax-FA 50mm F1.4 lens.
Fortunately, I took this photo in raw format, so modern-era noise reduction improved a bit on the original. Other than that and slightly tweaked curves, that's it - this is as close to straight-out-of-the-camera as it gets, in full six-megapixel glory.
Mount Ötscher, the highest mountain in Lower Austria, seen from St.Leonhard.
Taken in October 2007, this is one of my earliest digital efforts altogether. It was taken with my first digital camera - a PENTAX OPTIO L30 compact point & shoot (7 megapixels) - which I had bought to send an urgently needed photo by e-mail. I'm rather fond of this scene, with the tempting red apples, so I'm glad to have the chance to share it on flickr!