The technique used is based on the composition of multiple shots in order to increase the angle of view and the images resolution. Some of the images can be printed up to 50 x 75 inch (120 x 180 cm) at 150 DPI. The increased resolution and wider angle of view are great advantages but there are some other side-effects due to the massive use of multi row stitching. When stitching, you loose the use of the viewfinder as a tool for framing and you have to imagine your frame. When stitching you are forced to use spot-metering because each frame is a "spot". When stitching your pictures are produced after a long developing process and to shot a 20 frame multi-row stitch at night can take up to half an hour. Maybe in the future all these steps will be simplified by hardware and software technology; in the mean time I enjoy a technique that remembers the old large format workflow used by great masters of the past.

My aim is to apply and extend the process of stitching to obtain large format prints with unmatched resolution.