Rob-F
Likes Leicas
I set up a hundred or so digital images and ran them as a slideshow on my 21" iMac. They looked really good at the 21" size, so now I'm wondering about shooting digital images for display on a big flatscreen monitor. I don't have the flatscreen yet, but anticipate buying one. So, some questions:
How high a pixel count can a Hi-res monitor take advantage of? Aren't they limited to around 1024 pixels wide? So would a 10mp image that is already over 3000 pixels wide be wasted, even on the hi-res monitor? Or am I wrong to equate pixel width directly with monitor resolution?
What is the largest monitor screen that would reveal all the detail in the digital image, yet not be so over-magnified that sharpness and gradation begin to suffer? Since this is related to viewing distance, let's assume 8 feet for now.
Plasma or LCD? I tend to think Plasma, for the tonal range. What do you think?
How high a pixel count can a Hi-res monitor take advantage of? Aren't they limited to around 1024 pixels wide? So would a 10mp image that is already over 3000 pixels wide be wasted, even on the hi-res monitor? Or am I wrong to equate pixel width directly with monitor resolution?
What is the largest monitor screen that would reveal all the detail in the digital image, yet not be so over-magnified that sharpness and gradation begin to suffer? Since this is related to viewing distance, let's assume 8 feet for now.
Plasma or LCD? I tend to think Plasma, for the tonal range. What do you think?
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
Thanks for the reply! So, if it's 1920 x 1080, then would I be correct to assume that anything over 2mp, the product of 1920 x 1080, is superfluous for the purpose?
Also, am I correct in thinking that the resolution does not increase with screen size? so a 50" 1920 x 1080 will not show more detail than, say, a 42" or even a 36"?
Also, am I correct in thinking that the resolution does not increase with screen size? so a 50" 1920 x 1080 will not show more detail than, say, a 42" or even a 36"?
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
Hey, that was easy! Thanks again!
Finder
Veteran
As far as reproduction quality, are you going to be color managing the screen or workflow? What will drive the show? Does it recognize color management. I think an LCD will do very nicely.
We run a three monitor panel at our center. It is effectively a 4080x786 display--about 10-12 ft wide. The slides are sRGB JPEGs. They are designed in Adobe InDesign and resized in Photoshop to the screen resolution. PowerPoint drives the show.
However, if you want to run a single display for specific periods--not 24/7 like us--an impressive way to do it would be a rear projection screen and a digital projector. Hang that from a high ceiling in a big space or find a huge window and project it to the outside world.
We run a three monitor panel at our center. It is effectively a 4080x786 display--about 10-12 ft wide. The slides are sRGB JPEGs. They are designed in Adobe InDesign and resized in Photoshop to the screen resolution. PowerPoint drives the show.
However, if you want to run a single display for specific periods--not 24/7 like us--an impressive way to do it would be a rear projection screen and a digital projector. Hang that from a high ceiling in a big space or find a huge window and project it to the outside world.
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
Well, I think I will stick to a single monitor. I think I might drive it with my 13" Macbook, as it is easier to bring to the flat screen than the heavier iMac. I generally make my color adjustments on the Macintosh screen using Aperture. I shoot mostly in Adobe color space. Should I expect surprises in color when I display on the flatscreen TV?
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