Processing a panorama for printing

Yeah, it’s a possibility, but I think I’d prefer a “full frame” anyways for this one.

Yes I cropped beforehand, but I think the first time I tried it was without cropping, and it was as difficult.

I print a lot of my pictures for hanging. The standard “gallery style” is: black frame with minimum 2" white mat borders. This is for hanging on a white wall. For prints over ~24", then increase mat size to 3" borders.

When I first started hanging pictures, I would use different colored frames and mats, but 90% of the time these days, I stick with black frame/white mat. If I deviate from that, it’s for a specific reason. Example: a picture that has money has a key element, I put in a gold painted frame instead of black.

The framing and matting visually separates your work from the rest of the room and makes it look bigger and bolder than it really is.

If you go to a local custom frame shop or craft store, you’ll pay $$$. In the USA, arttoframe.com has decent prices, and they will custom cut mats for you. They ship it to you, and you just open the back of the frame and put the print inside. They are near NYC somewhere. Maybe even Brooklyn, where you took that picture. Stick with normal glass, none of that anti-glare or other fancy stuff, unless it will be hung somewhere that gets hit with direct sun, in which case you may want to consider UV-blocking glass. That website will also let you upload your image and render how it will look with your frame/mat combo if you do decide to get cute with different colored mounting materials.

There’s a little more advice I can give, but if interested, it’s probably better to start another thread.

That’s a really nice picture, and I love the way you processed it. Thanks for sharing!

2 Likes

@Stampede The link doesn’t work; don’t tease me with quality, affordable framing!

Arttoframe

1 Like

Thanks @Stampede. Unfortunately, I live in Guadeloupe (in the Caribbean) and ordering a custom framer from NYC isn’t possible (I’d pay at least twice the price of the frame).
There’s a local shop here that does custom frames.

I was wondering if it could worth getting the image printed directly on a board, without framing?

Maybe print on canvas?

It’s my thread, so feel free to share any advice here, that’s what I asked for :wink:

Maybe on metal?

1 Like

Yeah, that’s a problem. I know this is an international forum, so I wouldn’t have suggested normally it but I thought you may live near NYC because of your photo.

All my printing I have done on normal paper, and one time on Giclee canvas, so I can’t say much beyond that. Metal prints sound interesting to me, where they print directly on a sheet of aluminum, but that’s serious money, and apparently a very sensitive process that’s easy to screw up, so you have to make sure you go through a reputable shop that doesn’t cut corners. I’ll probably get something printed on metal sometime this year to see how it looks for myself.

I forget how big you want the final image to be, but you may want to think about getting small versions printed up on the different media. Like 5x10" size or something. So you can look at different options before getting the big one printed. Metallic photo paper (different from metal prints) looks really cool, especially in black and white. Even my non-photographer and non-artist friends will see a metallic paper print and comment on it.

I thought about it too, but I don’t know if I can have it done locally.

I didn’t know it exists. Interesting.

Here’s an updated version: no frame, and the brightness of the brightest spots reduced on the right side:

4 Likes

Yeah. It’s the sort of thing you need to see in real life to understand. You don’t really get how the print interacts with the ambient light when looking at it on a computer. Which is why I suggested getting some small prints made up.

Metallic paper is my favorite. The colors jump off the page and beat you over the head with their colorfulness. But this is a problem if there’s too many different colors in a small area. Example - this picture that I printed looked like hell on metallic paper because the colors were fighting each other. It looked fine on normal glossy and lustre papers:

You won’t have the problem with B&W pictures, or with pictures with large patches of one color. The different leaves and sky color in this one was too much on metallic paper.

1 Like

I searched quickly, and it looks like I can get a large (about 50 inch long) panorama printed on aluminum here (or at least the shop can have it printed in France and shipped to their shop directly). It would cost from 60 to 100 USD, depending on the exact size.
No sign of metallic paper though, but the store propose a high quality photo paper on aluminum sheet. I guess it’s a different different thing?
I think I’ll try getting a modest print size first to see the quality. Then I can have it hanging in my work office, not a loss.

Maybe a simple aluminium frame with photo mount.

3 Likes

How about making clouds a bit brighter? Something like this?

2 Likes

Good idea! I’ll have try but keep an eye of the noise (I find my camera gets a bit noisy above 1 second of exposure, and ISO was at 1250).

Noise should not be a issue as you are brightening only the lighter area and noise in the clouds may look like natural structure!! One way to do it in GIMP is:
Duplicate the layer twice. Turn the top layer blending mode to screen. Apply a black layer mask to that layer and roughly paint in (soft brush, white color and 100% opacity) the central parts of the clouds. Then apply large Gaussian blur to the mask. Merge Down to the second layer. Now you will have two layers. One original and other with lighter clouds. Repeat if necessary. This works for me every time.

3 Likes

Cool! Let us know how it turns out (post pictures).

It sounds like they are printing on normal photo paper, and then gluing the paper to a sheet of aluminum.

I don’t think you’re being offered a 50" print on aluminum for $60-100.

Here’s some of the prices where I got my canvas printing done. Measurements in inches, prices in USD:

metal%20print%20price

So it’s another reason to go small at first to make sure you understand what you are getting.

Printing pictures is fun. In one room, I started hanging pictures on one side of the room, and as I print new favorites, they are gradually moving leftward and filling up the wall across the room. It’s interesting to watch my skills and style changing as time goes on by looking around the room. Pictures that I took 3 years ago and thought at the time were the best thing ever, I now am sort of embarrassed about. But I leave them up now as a history lesson. Sort of a “this is where I came from” thing. I’m sure 3 more years from now, I will have second thoughts about my current favorites.

1 Like