Η ανάλυση είναι 1080χ900.
Κανονική εκτύπωση στα 300dpi είναι περίπου 9χ7,5 cm..Εχει λάβει τα μέτρα του ο καλλιτέχνης..
Και όπως αναφέρει ο ίδιος
εδώ:
To make the photos he built a special flash that lights the vinyl exactly how he wants it.
He shoots everything with a Hasselblad camera with a Phase One digital back and then makes enormous prints that are sometimes up to six feet big (which makes for a completely different experience than viewing them here on the web).
He’s given himself fairly strict rules to work by when is comes to his record and turntable choices. Nowadays he only uses first or second edition records that were printed in the country where the band is from. If it’s a Rolling Stones album it has to be from the United Kingdom. If it’s Miles Davis, it has to be from the United States. He then tries to photograph the records on a turntable that is from a similar era as the first edition of the record because he wants to recreate the original look.
“I think [having the first or second printing] of the vinyl is important because collectors will know,” he says.
Finding all these items in Germany has been less challenging that one might think. It turns out that there are several audiophiles in the Düsseldorf area where he lives that have extensive vinyl and record player collections. He put out a call on a local vinyl collectors website and quickly met people who were willing to sell or lend him what he was looking for.
For the harder, more obscure items, he turns to the web. He can almost always find the records or turntables he wants on Ebay, but sometimes they come at a price.
The most he’s ever paid for a record was 500 Euros, or about $650, on a copy of Elvis’ Mystery Train from Sun Records.
“I have my ways,” he says.