Gigapixel on the left and the original on the right side, trying to match relative size, and the results confirm it. I picked a section of the tail, with numbers, and placed the output from A.I. Images published here at PVC may not show exactly what I see on my screen, but I’ve the feeling that details are cleaner in the upscaled file. This is, no doubt, a solution to make your archived files gain a new dimension… pun intended! For this article I decided to use one aircraft photo as example, because it clearly shows the type of results you can achieve. Picking files taken almost two decades ago and upscaling them worked flawlessly. I know, now, it works, as I made some tests. Don’t be held back because you don’t have a high resolution copy of something – Make everything work.” The output image, on the left, shown at 100%, against the original, shown at 600%, for better comparison of detail
It’s something Topaz Labs already mentioned in the information they distributed, stating that ““like many people, your library contains various sources such as scans, drone footage, video frame captures, downloaded stock photography, search engine images, etc. Gigapixel reveals one area where the program excels, from my understanding. Again, to give you an idea of scale, on the left a section of the output image shown at 15%, with the same section of the original, on the right, at 100% I remember I also used the program to upscale the original files to send to the photo agency Alamy, as agencies then would only accept files with a resolution which was more than double that of the D30. As I mentioned in my previous article, years ago I would use Genuine Fractals to upscale photos taken with the Canon EOS D30, as they were too small for some of the uses I needed. The 600% upscaling gave me a file printable to dimensions I would not be able to achieve with the original file from the camera. The EOS D30 2160 x 1440 pixels image was transformed in a 12960 x 8640 pixels photo Gigapixel and the original, to show the difference in size. Let me share one example: in a few minutes, a 2160 x 1440 pixels from the 3.1MP camera was transformed into a 12960 x 8640, 112 MB file that could be printed at 109 x 73 cm at 300dpi. I did not try with a smartphone photo, but did pick some files from my Canon D30 to test, and was completely convinced. Gigapixel allows you to to get 100MP or even 1000MP photos from the files captured with a standard DSLR or mirrorless camera, and Topaz Labs even claims it can transform smartphones photos “into 100MP size and 16-bit quality that looks like it could only have come from a DLSR camera”. sampling, but you should not bite off more than you can chew! Gigapixel promises to enlarge your images up to 600% with revolutionary A.I.