The SJD comments page

Togman

Active Member
Only a matter of time…..
So, here's the dull explanation ...

The EXIF Data indicates that it was taken on an iPhone, and then saved as a jpeg which is a compressed image file format, on top of that the lighting looks like she's using one of those simple LED ring lights head on. So, these factors would indicate that the resolution is never going to be very good, i.e., poor original image quality and poor lighting.

To get excellent resolution you'd need to shoot on a Full Frame camera in an un-compressed RAW format and then convert to a very high quality jpeg, along with some decent studio lighting equipment, and a photographer that knows what she/he's doing.

The standard 72 dpi files that web pages normally use are never going to produce high quality/resolution images, the only way around this is to store each individual original high quality image on a third party media storage site, and download them from there.

The old adage of 'crap in, crap out' applies in this instance as it does with many others in life ...
 

Ilovebignips

Well-Known Member
deffinitely not shopped all the times

It seems her vids are a better bet than her photos. The vid shows a bit of a landing strip which isn't present in photos from the same shoot. The photos surely must be shopped, the image quality can't be so bad so as to obliterate all detail in one specific area?
 

55isAlive

Well-Known Member
So, here's the dull explanation ...

The EXIF Data indicates that it was taken on an iPhone, and then saved as a jpeg which is a compressed image file format, on top of that the lighting looks like she's using one of those simple LED ring lights head on. So, these factors would indicate that the resolution is never going to be very good, i.e., poor original image quality and poor lighting.

To get excellent resolution you'd need to shoot on a Full Frame camera in an un-compressed RAW format and then convert to a very high quality jpeg, along with some decent studio lighting equipment, and a photographer that knows what she/he's doing.

The standard 72 dpi files that web pages normally use are never going to produce high quality/resolution images, the only way around this is to store each individual original high quality image on a third party media storage site, and download them from there.

The old adage of 'crap in, crap out' applies in this instance as it does with many others in life ...
I have absolutely no idea what yer talking about mate i meant only a matter of time till she gets the minge oot haha
 
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