View Full Version : Shooting dSLR in widescreen (1920x1200) (1440x900)?
Veritas&Equitas
Feb 18, 2007, 01:51 PM
Hey, sorry to start so many threads...but I've really appreciated the help! Once again, I have a d50, and I'm looking to take some nice photos for my desktops. What I'm wondering is, the shots that come out usually are like 3000x2000 or 1500x1000 or something along those lines, and for me to resize the images (like in PS) causes them to stretch, or fall out of proportion...is there anyway to shoot great true widescreen images and not have this disproportion when I want to make a desktop? Thanks again for all the help!
dllavaneras
Feb 18, 2007, 02:03 PM
scale down to the widest side of your screen (1920 or 1440 pixels) and crop :)
jdavtz
Feb 18, 2007, 02:26 PM
First crop the picture to 16:10 proportions instead of standard dSLR 3:2 proportions, then resize to your desktop's pixel size (+/- add a bit of sharpening).
wmmk
Feb 19, 2007, 01:59 AM
If you really care about this, you could shoot 16:9 with a few Leica digital and panasonic models. Or just crop in photoshop. I think you know which makes more sense;)
Abstract
Feb 19, 2007, 03:10 AM
Is it that big a deal? Widescreen is 16:10, while DSLRs usually shoot at what is essentially 15:10. That's 1/16th different from widescreen.
But if it does matter for your usage, crop. :)
snap58
Feb 19, 2007, 07:16 AM
scale down to the widest side of your screen (1920 or 1440 pixels) and crop :)
Or, just set your "crop tool" to match your screen and do it in one step.
wmmk
Feb 19, 2007, 02:50 PM
Or, just set your "crop tool" to match your screen and do it in one step.
yeah, but if you do things that way, you are missing out on some parts of the picture. always crop for aspect ratio, NOT actual dimensions.
ecksmen
Feb 19, 2007, 09:10 PM
yeah, but if you do things that way, you are missing out on some parts of the picture. always crop for aspect ratio, NOT actual dimensions.
User preference.
panoz7
Feb 19, 2007, 09:15 PM
yeah, but if you do things that way, you are missing out on some parts of the picture. always crop for aspect ratio, NOT actual dimensions.
Why? I can't see how you miss out on anything other then a second step? This just combines the crop and image resize steps into one action.
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