T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
31.1 | One Way | HYSTER::DEARBORN | | Thu May 22 1986 12:11 | 22 |
| It depends upon the application.
If you are looking for photographs or transparencies of screens,
you can shoot right off the screen, using a slow shutter speed and
a long lens (to minimize screen curvature distortion). With the
RGB output, you could probably feed a film recorder like the Palette
system.
If the end result is for four color printing, it is possible to
take the image file on disk and send it to a service that translates
it into a Scitex image file for four color separation. The advantage
of this process is that no film is involved. You wind up with a
printed image that is vitually perfect--perfect rectangular pixels,
each representing the original colors, no grain from film, no fuzzy
edges. This process only applies to images that are going to be
printed (on a printing press, not photographically printed). Amiga
World magazine uses this process for the images in it's 'Digital
Canvas' section. The last issue has an article about how to get
'output' from the Amiga, and might offer some more insight.
Randy
|
31.2 | how to get hold of screen dump | ANYWAY::BROWN | Doug Brown | Tue Jun 03 1986 10:02 | 5 |
| How does one get an image file on disk? And, once it is on disk
what is the format of the information? Are the pixel values in
terms rgb values or do they refer to the color registers?
db
|
31.3 | the SX-70 way | HYSTER::DEARBORN | | Tue Jun 03 1986 10:03 | 15 |
| I have received excellent results with a Polaroid SLR680 camera
(a SX-70, autofocus folding slr camera that uses 600 film) Just
put the camera on a tripod, turn the room lights off, turn the internal
flash off, aim and shoot. Becuase the camera is a SLR, what you
see is what you get, making image cropping easy.
You get wonderful saturated colors and good detail. The camera
can focus down to 10.4 inches, allowing you to zoom in on portions
of an image. Digital's Industrial Design Group in Maynard uses
this technique with their "Lightspeed" computer graphics system
with great success.
Randy
|
31.4 | IFF | HYSTER::DEARBORN | | Tue Jun 03 1986 12:57 | 5 |
| re .2
Any graphic created with Graphicraft, Deluxe Paint or Aegis Images
is stored in a standardized IFF graphics file. (There are slight
differences but all are interchangeable)
|
31.5 | Nikon FA users Beware! | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jul 09 1986 15:43 | 33 |
| I recently got the public domain Mandelbrot set drawing program,
and this inspired me to take some more screen pictures. So I trotted
out my trusty Nikon FA (state of the art technology to match the
Amiga) and started shooting. I had done this before with my F3
and noticed no anomalies; why then was the FA's metering system
freaking out (i.e., I was using it in aperture preferred automation
mode, and the shutter speed was varying continuously over a range
of about 4 stops!)?
A little thought led me to the following conjecture - the FA's AMP
"intelligent" metering system's clock rate was "beating" with the
Amiga's screen refresh cycle. Since the 1080 monitor has a low
persistence phosphor, the screen is actually illuminated in a wave
that sweeps down the screen 60 times a second. Our eyes don't perceive
this wave because it's faster than the visual system's fusion
frequency. But the FA's metering logic IS fast enough to perceive
it. The FA looks at five different areas of its view and based
on the relative brightness of these areas makes a decision about
correct exposure. My guess is that what's happening is the FA
periodically looks at these five areas, and the periodicity of these
updates is interacting with the Amiga's screen refresh, so each
time the FA looks, it sees a different part of the screen illuminated,
and computes a different "correct" exposure.
Solution: turn off AMP metering.
Incidentally, I've been shooting my screen pictures with a 105mm
f/4 macro lens, at about 3 feet distance. I've been using Ektachrome
100 and Kodachrome 64 (whatever's handy) and exposures have been
about 1/15 sec. at f/4. The pictures are gorgeous.
len.
|
31.6 | files to slides | TRUMAN::LEIMBERGER | | Tue Jul 29 1986 05:09 | 11 |
| ImageSEt had an ad in AMIGA WORLD SEP/OCT pg 62.They say they will
put your files on disk out to slides,or prints. While I have nothing
to work with at present except GRAPHICRAFT I am tempted to submit
something just to see the results.The ad said 2-3 days+mailing?
for those not lucky enough to have AMIGA WORLD
ImageSet corp.
555 19th St.
San Fran.,CA. 94107
(415) 626-8366
bill
|
31.7 | | HYSTER::DEARBORN | The One to Watch <> | Tue Jul 29 1986 12:24 | 3 |
| ImageSet are the people who also provide color separations of Amiga
Graphics for print, going straight to Scitex.
|