Okay . Been a while since I posted question regarding using stitching versus a 4x5 chrome. The question being would/could stitching equal 4x5. Said I was going to do an experiment and I did...
By the way- free videos on photo technique but mainly photographing in the wild are posted on my website wildernesslight.com. Shameless plug.
...Here's how the experiment went. I grabbed my brother in law's Canon Rebel, 6 or 7 megapixel camera, walked out the Florida condo and made a few panos. No pano equipment, 24-70 zoom, auto everything. Shot vertical frames anywhere from 4-8 frames. I made sure that each pano had foreground starting at 4-5 feet and extending to 200 feet and/or infinity.
Put the images into Photoshop CS 3 and let the softwear do its thing. The results were conclusive if the experiment technique was not. The panos failed to make it to 4x5 quality by a long margin. It would have taken at least 2 rows of individual photos, even light, focus blending....and a processing nightmare to get this to measure up to 4x5 quality. Even with the new Canon 5D I think stitching is going to be a real pain in the real world.
The good news is that the photos were razor sharp where they were focused. If I could have taken that tiny sliver of the photo that was in-focus and replicated that and mutiplied that by 2 pano rows I would have made a 4x5 duplicate.
So how about single digital capture with a phase one 60 megapixel back...
I was looking at the luminous-landscape photos from Antarctica and someone made the comment that the phase one 65 back images on the web looked better than the Sony 25 megapixel camera images. This was obvious to me too. What's also been obvious to me is that anything less than this $40,000 back does not equal 4x5. Ive looked at photos from 31 and 39 megapixel backs and the first thing I said to myself was, "ain't 4x5".
I'm not through with digital yet. I think that stitching technique could be better applied than what I did. A camera like the Leica S-2 might work. It could work if you only had to do a one row pano. This might still need a focus near and a focus far for every part of the photo to be as sharp as 4x5. But the cost. I've sold a lot of prints and I know a few photographers making their livings selling prints and there's no way a $60,000 camera outfit makes any economic sense. No way in hell if you have kids , mortgage, car and want to eat.
Plus a medium format outfit weighs in and is bulkier than 4x5. It also has way to many parts to go wrong with it. And forget about taking it anywhere except where you can keep it chained to your wrist.
For now I'll suck it up and put the Linhof into the backpack. But the time will come when I can't get my outsourced scans and I really can't carry the weight.
I'll let it develop...maybe something by th enext Photokina.
Claude Fiddler