The largest seamless photograph made in a single exposure was made using a Southern California jet hangar transformed into a giant camera. The most recent claim to the largest image stitched together was by the Canadian Museum of Civilization. [1] On 3 August 2015, the longest photographic negative was measured 79.37 m (260.4 ft) wide.
This negative was created by Esteban Pastorino Díaz. Welcome into the largest panorama image ever taken at 3.500m. You can navigate the image using the navigation buttons on bottom right.
Or you can start a demo tour clicking on Tour button Or you can Come and see some details we selected for you clicking. Gigapixel photography is the craft of shooting hundreds or thousands of photos and joining them together into a single, seamless, ultra-high resolution image. These extremely large images are typically shot with a complex setup involving long lenses and a programmable robot, typically requiring weeks or months of post production (but we can do it in as little as 24 hours, if needed).
When done. Say hello to the new largest photo in the world. An international team led by photographer Filippo Blengini has published a gigantic panoramic photograph of Mont Blanc, Europe's highest mountain.
This 120 gigapixel panoramic image is the highest resolution image ever captured of New York City, using EarthCam's GigapixelCam technology. The Rijksmuseum published the largest and most detailed ever photograph of The Night Watch on its website, making it possible to zoom in on individual brushstrokes and even particles of pigment in the painting. A team of photographers has published what they say is the world's largest photo, a panoramic shot of Europe's Mont Blanc that measures 365 gigapixels.
A 320-gigapixel image taken from top of London's BT Tower has set the world record of the largest panoramic photo. It breaks the previous record set by a 281-gigapixel electron micrograph of a zebrafish embryo taken in 2012. The London image was shot by panorama specialists 360 Cities and is made up of 48,640 individual frames.
To get an idea of just how large this photograph is, BT says if it. It's the largest panoramic photo ever taken: Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in the European Alps, standing mighty and snow. This photograph of Rembrandt's "The Night Watch" is "the largest and most detailed photo ever taken of a work of art.".