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Ultra high-resolution image of The Night Watch (2022)

rijksmuseum.nl

590 points by lhoff a year ago · 152 comments

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besttof a year ago

A colleague of mine made this very nice way to explore the (often) high resolution images from their collection:

https://rijkscollection.net/

Highly recommended and easy to fall into a “rijkscollection hole” for a bit :)

  • UberFly a year ago

    This is really nice to use. Is this how this wing of the gallery actually looks?

  • GrumpyNl a year ago

    Works better than the one mentioned in the title, this one let you zoom in and out with scroll weel.

  • diego_moita a year ago

    Technically it is an interesting project.

    But anyone who has visited the museum will find it weird. It is very different. The building architecture is very different, there are thousands more works in the exposition, and the order of the works is very different, ...

    • amsterdorn a year ago

      I've visited the museum many times and I find it to be excellent!

    • mosselman a year ago

      What is weird about it? That it isn't exactly like the real museum?

      • diego_moita a year ago

        In the museum, I felt a dialogue between each painting with the surrounding ones. They'd be grouped stylistically, with painters from the same era, on similar themes. It was like a walk where we'd see a continuous. In the computer/site, it is much more discrete, sectioned, and compartmentalized.

  • drng a year ago

    This is super cool. Thanks for sharing the link

wkat4242 a year ago

I worked at this museum a few decades ago on a contract job, it was cool to walk around among so much history. Though I never really could appreciate the "old masters" from the Dutch Golden Age. Their work was part art and part record-keeping for which nowadays we have photography and video. The subject of many of these works are stuffy rich people posing for the "family album". Artfully done yes but boring subjects in my personal opinion.

I did like some of the landscape views though. But overall I'm more into modern art where the art and the message is the only goal.

One of the things special to me about the night watch is that it's huge in real life which I never really appreciated before I saw it. In contrast, the Mona Lisa at the Louvre was disappointingly tiny.

  • ethbr1 a year ago

    > One of the things special to me about the night watch is that it's huge in real life which I never really appreciated before I saw it.

    Famous art that's stunningly bigger in person than I expected:

       - The Raft of the Medusa (Géricault)
       - Guernica (Picasso)
       - The Hallucinogenic Toreador (Dalí)
    
    Cannot recommend seeing art in person enough.

    Aside from the scale, it's also impossible to fully capture color or translucency in screen/page-presented imaging.

    And so much of the European painting mastery in the 1400s+ is the manipulation of non-opaque paint to create a desired effect.

    • SamBam a year ago

      And famous art that's much smaller in person than I expected: The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai. For such an epic image, it's only 25x37 cm / 10x14".

    • trox a year ago

      Aside from color and translucency, an original artwork shows also the relief. It can tell much about the creation process of a painting and adds additional texture. Furthermore, some pigments were expensive and hard to work with prior to the 19th century such that artists used it very sparingly.

      • disillusioned a year ago

        This stood out to me the very first time I saw Starry Night at MoMa. The paint is so thickly layered, and you can see the individual brush strokes in stark relief.

      • Guillaume86 a year ago

        It makes me wish for a VR app with ultra HD reproductions, you could have normal maps and other 3d techniques to add another level of fidelity, the scale is also not a problem in VR.

    • throwup238 a year ago

      Add to that the Blue Boy by Thomas Gainsborough at the Pasadena Huntington and anything by Hans Holbein the Younger such as the portraits of Sir Thomas More and Thomas Cromwell at the Frick Collection.

      The former uses a brilliant blue paint that is simply impossible to convey via RGB display or CMYK printing color spaces and the latter look like giant printed photographs, down to the stubble on More's face, even though they were painted in the early 16th century.

      > And so much of the European painting mastery in the 1400s+ is the manipulation of non-opaque paint to create a desired effect.

      I'm sad that people don't bother with that as much today. I went on a shopping spree a while ago buying a bunch of Williamsburg and Old Holland oil paints and their colors are absolutely amazing, especially the old school heavy metal paints which come in a variety of opacities. Blending them is an art in its own right. Sadly I don't have any skill at painting so it's mostly abstract experiments with color.

    • dexwiz a year ago

      Napoleon Crossing the Alps Is also much bigger than I expected.

    • MeteorMarc a year ago

      Add Birth of Venus (Botticelli)

  • JJMcJ a year ago

    Rembrandt could put life into rich people's portraits in ways few were ever able to match.

    Besides the Night Watch, this one: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rembrandt_-_De_Staal...

    known in English by various names, such as Syndics of the Drapers' Guild. These portrayals are anything but stuffy.

    One writer said, if you take Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, for music, Rembrandt was more than that for painting.

    • wkat4242 a year ago

      Yeah I just don't 'see that' in them. Like I said I'm far from an art connoisseur.

      So what I said is my opinion alone :)

  • gyomu a year ago

    > One of the things special to me about the night watch is that it's huge in real life which I never really appreciated before I saw it. In contrast, the Mona Lisa at the Louvre was disappointingly tiny.

    I had the same experience seeing a print of Hokusai’s Great Wave. For whatever reason it was built up in my mind as a huge piece, but in reality it’s the size of a standard sheet of paper.

    • meindnoch a year ago

      Ukiyo-e had standard sizes, but none was larger than an A/2 piece of paper.

  • jimvdv a year ago

    I agree with you on the subjects are boring rich people, if we judge it with today standards. For the time it was actually quite unique that (upper) middle class people could get their portrait done, and not just nobles.

    I like to think of it as part of a period of history where the merchants start to gain power from the aristocracy and that shows in what gets passed down to us.

    • JJMcJ a year ago

      > (upper) middle class people

      It reflects a great change in Western society, which really began to flourish first in the Netherlands, where the merchant and industrial classes began to be dominant, and were growing sick of pretending it wasn't true.

      Mostly in Britain these days, we see the final pretenses of the nobility on display.

      • ghaff a year ago

        Holland is really where the wealthy merchant class first became dominant in Europe--and was generally not subservient to the nobility as in other other countries.

  • cezart a year ago

    I remember what I liked about Rijks upon visiting was that it was organized by decade, and had not only paintings, but various historical artifacts as well. Like state corporation sealed opium, which offered a context for the contemporary relaxed attitude of the Dutch towards drug consumption. And in general offered many windows into how the country grew up to be what it is. So yes, much history!

  • archagon a year ago

    I was walking around the Rijksmuseum just yesterday and had the same thought. Except: Rembrandt’s paintings stood out to me among those of his peers. His subjects didn’t feel posed and his lighting and setpieces felt soft and naturalistic, not artificial. Each canvas gave the impression of an intimate peek into someone’s life. The style almost reminded me of late Romantic paintings (e.g. Peredvizhniki) that came 200 years later.

  • scyzoryk_xyz a year ago

    Recommend Peter Greenaway’s film „J’Accuse” about Rembrandt and that painting. It shares your criticism and argues that in it’s own time, that painting did as well.

  • dclowd9901 a year ago

    For me, it took going to Van Gogh’s museum in Amsterdam to really get it. The way they contextualize and explain his work and the actual lighting of the museum is something to experience first hand.

  • kwanbix a year ago

    What is so incredible is the technique they used, the level of detail and how lifelike they are.

    • magicalhippo a year ago

      Something which is very hard, if not impossible, to get unless you look at the real deal.

      I'm generally not into art but my mom took me to the Rijksmuseum, and I was blown away by the details in those paintings. I spent probably 15 minutes just studying the translucent ruff in one of the paintings in amazement.

      The paint is three dimensional, the light interacts in ways which just aren't captured in a photo. Viewing the paintings on my screen here now they all look flat and quite dull in comparison.

  • Ichthypresbyter a year ago

    > Though I never really could appreciate the "old masters" from the Dutch Golden Age. Their work was part art and part record-keeping for which nowadays we have photography and video. The subject of many of these works are stuffy rich people posing for the "family album". Artfully done yes but boring subjects in my personal opinion.

    That's actully what I like about the Night Watch, and how it's displayed. It's in a room with other paintings from the same period in the same genre (group portraits of guilds or militia units), so you can see what Rembrandt's clients were expecting and how the Night Watch is different.

  • devilbunny a year ago

    If you want a really interesting version of the work, go to the Royal Delft factory. They made a reproduction in their famous blue tile. It's about the same size as the original.

  • mmustapic a year ago

    What I do like about those paintings is the techniques used: relief to give some parts more volume, simple strokes to portray glass or metal reflections, other kind of simple strokes for textiles. As you say, now we have photographs, but it amazes me how what they could do without that technology.

  • didntcheck a year ago

    When I visited I think I spent more time looking at the architecture of the building than the collections. It's very nice. Similar story with the Louvre I suppose - I never went in, but enjoyed walking past the pyramid exterior in the evening

  • ErigmolCt a year ago

    Art’s impact often depends on context

  • ghaff a year ago

    Yeah, it's not really fair to associate quality with size but... Thomas Cole's huge works. Most of Rembrandt's famous works are fairly large. Etc. I admit to not being an especial admirer of the Mona Lisa but certainly larger works grab our attention more.

  • sim7c00 a year ago

    well now most people look at pictures of stuff rich ppl on their phones all day. maybe they were ahead of their time :D. wish there were old masters who made pictures of cats. id visit that museum for sure.

  • timwaagh a year ago

    Sounds like you have been to the Rijks and nowhere else. Lots of old paintings of all kinds of scenes hang in lots of museums all over this country. Not a huge museum goer but this lacks nuance.

keepamovin a year ago

Oh wow, that is so cool. I thought I was at max zoom, normal blurry tiles. Then BOOM! It came into focus and I saw tiny cracks, smallest areas of paint, no loss of clarity. It's like you're standing right up next to it. That's incredible! Wow, all I can say. That's insane, that is totally insane!

I would love if there were a depthmask or something and a synthetic "keylight" feature you could drag around to really get an idea of the textures, the peaks and valleys. I guess we'll have that in a future version. This is incredible.

Freak_NL a year ago

An older, lower resolution image (11206 × 9320 pixels) can be downloaded here:

https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/search/objects?q=nachtwacht&p=...

To avoid the dumb mandatory account login, just use https://bugmenot.com/view/rijksmuseum.nl . It worked just now (so be nice and leave it working).

Despite the ill-advised mandatory account (really, what's up with that?), the Rijksmuseum is providing a better service than the neighbouring Van Goghmuseum, which refuses to share anything but low resolution photos of Vincent van Gogh's works. Public museums are supposed to be custodians of culture, not IP owners.

  • re a year ago

    Wikimedia has a slightly higher-res image more easily accessible: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Nightwatch_by_Re... (14,168 × 11,528 px)

    • ozim a year ago

      Cool wiki has people recognition on paintings so you can click the link to see note about person in the picture!

      • porphyra a year ago

        It's not people recognition, it's just manually created tags by volunteers. Anyone can draw a box on any image and write whatever they want in it.

    • Freak_NL a year ago

      Odd that the resolution differs. The source linked to from Wikimedia Commons is the same page at the museum's website as the one I linked to.

      • SloopJon a year ago

        The color for the Wikimedia image looks way off on my computer. Is it possible that it's tagged with the wrong color profile?

  • mjfisher a year ago

    I'm on mobile; I scrolled to the bottom and clicked the image of the painting and could zoom in to my heart's content - did it ask you for an account?

    • Freak_NL a year ago

      You can zoom in a lot on the 2490 × 1328 pixels offered. When you hit the download button for the full version, you get nagged.

      Edit: you can zoom in, and then it will offer up the painting in slices at a higher resolution. So in theory you could download those and stitch them together if you manage to hit an unscaled version.

  • mistrial9 a year ago

    the account might be a combination of "deter abusive downloads" and "help, we have not enough members" combined.. now thinking, the result of account gets sent to administration and then funders, too, as a report result. not defending the practice, but the institution has to defend and maintain, too.

gyomu a year ago

Those 100MP digital medium format cameras are the most exciting tech in photography of the whole 21st century as far as I’m concerned.

For my “serious” photography work I shoot medium/large format film, and every digital camera has left me non plussed. I may be a little obsessive about image quality, but what’s the point of dropping $5k on a setup that gives worse results than a wooden box and a sheet of film?

Then I got the Fuji GFX100 (the Hassy was a little out of my range :-) and… wow. Totally different ball game. I can finally produce digital images that rival film scans.

Seeing what museums have been doing with them has been super cool.

  • formerly_proven a year ago

    There’s a trade off between sharpness and noise, the GFX have an intentionally lowered fill factor to, essentially, produce a sharper image. Meanwhile noise is one of the most important things when marketing mainstream cameras (next to AF), so they go for gapless microlenses etc.

    The reason this impacts sharpness is because a lower FF gets you closer to Shannon’s ideal point sample, while a 99% FF is like a pitch-sized box filter.

    • account42 a year ago

      There is also a tradeoff between sharpness and aliasing, that's a bigger driver for microlenses than just capturing more photons. A point sample is only ideal if your sample resolution is above the nyquist frequency which for the real world it won't be.

      • formerly_proven a year ago

        Yes, this was nicely highlighted by the GFX50 vs. GFX100. Both are around 50% fill factor and have no OLPF, the GFX50 produces a lot of aliasing artifacts, the GFX100 much less so, because Nyquist moves up some 40%, so diffraction takes more readily care of attenuating these higher spatial frequencies.

cyberlimerence a year ago

For anyone interested in technical aspects of this, I recommend watching Pycon talk [1] from Robert Erdmann. I bookmarked this couple of years ago.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_hm5oX7ZlE

  • gunsch a year ago

    I had the fortune of taking Erdmann's Python class at the University of Arizona 15 years ago --- a Python/Pylab/data engineering class aimed at materials science engineering students.

    He was already getting into this kind of art spectroscopy at the time, and the things he'd showed us at the time that they'd already discovered were wild. IIRC, they had laid out many Rembrandts on the same large "scroll" of canvas, identified where they were painted relative to one another on the scroll, and even identified some paintings of unclear authorship by thing them to that same scroll.

    It was not at all surprising to see him move to Amsterdam and keep working with the Rijksmuseum. I smile every time I see this work pop up.

  • encomiast a year ago

    Watching that seriously intensifies my imposter syndrome.

ssfrr a year ago

> an error of even 1/8 mm in the placement of the camera would result in a useless image.

That doesn’t make sense to me. Presumably part of the image stitching process is aligning the images to each other based on the areas they overlap, so why do they need that much precision in the camera placement? I’d think keeping the camera square to the painting would be important to minimize needing to skew the images, but that doesn’t seem to be what they’re talking about.

  • gertlex a year ago

    I assumed it was mostly distance from painting surface to camera that needed to be controlled for.

  • schobi a year ago

    A camera+lens set up to 5 micron/pixel will have a shallow depth of field.

    I looked up some numbers: The pixels of the camera are 4.6um, so the likely used a 1:1 makro lens (likely the HC 4/120mm). You will capture a 53x40mm region at once. The working distance for this lens goes down to 40cm for 1:1 magnification (might have been 40-45cm). Aperture 4 (as little diffraction as possible)

    If we put that in a calculator, depth of field is only 240um. This is the working range where the object needs to be to be in focus.

    I'm surprised the painting is that flat over a single image. Even a high spot on the canvas or an extra dab of paint will be higher. Maybe they took multiple images and focus stacked them?

  • ipsum2 a year ago

    The camera is manual focused, so 1/8mm would make it out of focus.

mrs6969 a year ago

I am literally standing in the museum, looking at night watch as this moment, and saw this post. Legend.

  • mmooss a year ago

    It's interesting that while standing in front of the painting, someone would be looking at their phone, and that they would look at a photograph of the painting.

  • j4coh a year ago

    Hacker News in one eye and the painting in the other?

  • rtaylorgarlock a year ago

    Get off yo phone!!! ;)

    I got to watch them do some of the scanning when I walked through the museum on a trip a couple years ago. Very cool setup.

  • ErigmolCt a year ago

    Enjoy the moment and soak in all the details

diego_moita a year ago

The Rijksmuseum is on my top 5 list of museums I've ever visited, along with the Vatican Museum, the Louvre, the Met and the Uffizzi.

There are a lot more interesting works in there including Vermeer, other Rembrandt works, Pieter DeHooch, Rubens, the whole golden era of Dutch Renaissance...

Since you're in Amsterdam already save some time to visit the VanGogh Museum, very close to Rijksmuseum.

And since you're in Netherlands already save some time to go to Den Hag (the Hague) to visit the Maritius Huis museum and the cool M.C. Escher museum.

  • generj a year ago

    I loved the M.C. Escher museum. The art-deco decor of the building is on display nearly as much as Escher’s work.

    I also highly recommend going to Rembrandt’s house/studio in Amsterdam.

  • dralley a year ago

    Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna is very nice. The inside is basically a palace.

  • orloffm a year ago

    The sad reality is that if one is _already_ in Amsterdam, he or she has to spend a week or two more there just to be able to get into the VanGogh Museum.

Aachen a year ago

Not sure if off topic, but this German TV ad did a creative recreation of the painting that I found amusing as a Dutch person: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6XQXhr7LQM

JohnKemeny a year ago

Related:

Most detailed ever photograph of The Night Watch goes online (125 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23151934

Ultra High Resolution Photo of Night Watch (2022) (40 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29778166

charles_f a year ago

There's something oddly satisfying in that you keep zooming in impressively close, and the image remains clean and non blurry.

  • dclowd9901 a year ago

    The map or whatever they use to achieve the online widget is extremely impressive. I’ve never seen such a clean implementation of a progressively loading zoom tool like that before, apart from in map applications and even they often suffer from buffering.

curiousgal a year ago

To be honest I don't understand the obsession about documenting things that are done to the painting. Going through that section of the museum I felt like the curators cared more about showcasing their efforts to store the painting than the painting itself.

  • davidmr a year ago

    I think it’s a way of keeping the museum’s single most popular piece of art on display whilst working it. I think most museums would remove it for a while, but so many people come specifically to see this painting that they want to keep it viewable, so they make a little show of its restoration.

    I dunno; I’ve been through that floor 5 or 6 times since they started work, and people always seem to love the spectacle of it.

  • wrsh07 a year ago

    I always find it fascinating! Much like it is important in a museum of natural history to note "science isn't finished, some of these things are still under research" it's important to contextualize the painting you see today.

    The painting today is different than it was fifty years ago or a hundred years ago or from the day it was completed.

    It's common for paintings to be modified after completion, either by the creator or by the current owner. Whose version are you seeing? What are the possible versions?

    Anyway, the best part of a museum is you don't have to look at the things that bore you

  • perihelions a year ago

    I suspect there's selection effects in play: museum curators who don't aggressively make the case for more museum funding, don't end up curating the most well-funded museums.

  • andrepd a year ago

    Why not? It's an old work of art, if you're going to make changes to it you better do the best equivalent of `git commit` that you physically can, to preserve how it was before your change.

  • dewey a year ago

    Sometimes I find these things more interesting than the painting. I think it's good to also highlight what the museum is working on. Otherwise people would think it's just a room where they hang up new paintings once in a while, the restoring and research part would then be even more invisible.

  • roughly a year ago

    This particular piece of work is damn near 400 years old. When one is tasked with participating in preserving such an item so the next twenty generations can also enjoy it, it pays to take notes on what you’ve done with your small part of that chain.

  • throwup238 a year ago

    Preserving and restoring an oil painting that old and large is a minor achievement, especially considering how many people have tried to destroy the painting in the last hundred years.

    • shagie a year ago

      One of the channels that I've stumbled across in my YouTube travels is Baumgartner Restoration - https://www.youtube.com/@BaumgartnerRestoration

      > Julian Baumgartner of Baumgartner Fine Art Restoration, a second generation studio and now the oldest in Chicago employs only the finest archival and reversible materials and techniques to conserve and restore artworks for future generations.

      Its really interesting seeing the removal of past restoration attempts and the modern techniques to restore a painting.

      If I was to pick two that touch most on the responsibility of restoration and what is and is not achievable...

      Scraping, Scraping, Scraping Or A Slow Descent Into Madness. The Conservation of Mathias J. Alten https://youtu.be/YOOQl0hC18U

      Restoring The Faceless Painting https://youtu.be/hsTkaSbMLHw https://youtu.be/rDVcgpSwnyg https://youtu.be/JWCBNL-iu5s

ph1l337 a year ago

Feels like you could make a fun game out of guessing where in the image you in the most zoomed in level.

stavros a year ago

This is good, but I wish they would allow for more than 1:1 zoom in. 1:1 pixels on a 4k display are too small, I'd like to be able to zoom in more than that.

jl6 a year ago

> To create this huge image, the painting was photographed in a grid with 97 rows and 87 columns with our 100-megapixel Hasselblad H6D 400 MS camera.

Looks like they had the ability to move the camera precisely to one of 97x87 grid positions. I wonder if they had any headroom in the precision of that movement. Could they have used a lower resolution but much cheaper camera and compensated by taking, say, a 200x200 grid of images instead?

timwaagh a year ago

Rembrandt did not work in this resolution so i think zoomed in it will just be a bunch of random noise.

BrandoElFollito a year ago

First time I visited the Rijksmuseum I was of course excited to see the night watch. I found it on a side wall, 20x15 cm and was really surprised. I was expecting something more grandiose.

But never mind, I love paintings from that era so I went on admiring the others.

At some point I was in the middle of the central corridor and it then hit me... Wow.

Before getting to the main part of the museum, there were two temporary exhibitions. One was about doll houses and the other was about the activities (work) on a 17th century ship.

The latter was amazing. I was traumatized by the surgeon work, and his 5 tools... 5 tools to handle all injuries - how happy I am too live in France in the 21st century

  • dralley a year ago

    The Nights Watch takes up nearly an entire wall, not sure what you saw but it wasn't the actual painting.

    • BrandoElFollito a year ago

      That's the point - As a sibling comment says - there is a small replica and then suddenly I saw the whole painting at the end of the central corridor. This was a "wow" moment, and an unexpected one

    • I-M-S a year ago

      Not only does it take up the entire wall, IIRC part of it was actually cut in order for it to fit that wall.

      • nuthje a year ago

        The sides were cut to fit a place in the old city hall (now palace) on Dam square in 1715.

  • BrandoElFollito a year ago

    Since it was not clear from my comment: "At some point I was in the middle of the central corridor and it then hit me... Wow" was when I discovered the real painting on a whole wall at the end of the central corridor. It was amazing

  • tnolet a year ago

    You saw the small replica Rembrandt made for the dude who commissioned the painting. He wanted one to hang in his home. It’s much smaller than the actual piece, which covers a whole wall.

    And indeed, the large one got a chunk cut off at some stage as they had to move it. This was long ago when Rembrandt was not particularly in vogue.

ck2 a year ago

Very vaguely related to image detail but you know what similarly impressed the heck out of me:

you know that first ever imaging of a black hole using telescopes across the globe and even the poles to make the signal gathering as wide as possible?

well that telescope (interferometer) could also image a TENNIS BALL on the MOON

(in perspective currently 5 meters is the best resolution of the moon we have and they only get like one or two photons back when they bounce a laser off that mirror the astronauts left there)

So are we going to enter an era where we can get ten more times out of existing telescopes with exponentially better sensors?

  • zokier a year ago

    There is fairly significant difference in radio observations and visible spectrum imaging though. You aren't going to get 5m resolution visible light image of the Moon any time soon.

sdoering a year ago

Whenever I see this image, or read bout it, I instantly want to listen to the great song by Ayreon, inspired by it:

"The Shooting Company Of Captain Frans B. Cocq" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVlSARPr9Y0

Funny coincidence - only this morning I watched a documentary about how they used machine learning to reconstruct the destroyed parts of the painting.

FredPret a year ago

This is why it always pays to do your best work down to the smallest detail.

You never know if, 400 years later, people are going to invent a way to examine it atom by atom.

lovegrenoble a year ago

Direct link to image: https://hyper-resolution.org/view.html?pointer=0.375,0.000&r...

mmooss a year ago

This page is a bit better, and lets you zoom to the pixel level (they say):

https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/stories/operation-night-watch?...

stefanvdw1 a year ago

I’ve built a website which will show you a random object from the massive Rijksmuseum collection. Always nice to find something you’ve never seen before!

https://randomrijks.com

grugagag a year ago

Fascinating to see how the paint cracked. I zoomed in around the faces of the three men on the bottom right hand side and there are light areas on their faces with few cracks and dark areas with lots of cracks, eg around the noses. I wonder what caused that.

  • mejutoco a year ago

    I do not know of course, but black oil painting cracks more than other colours. I think it is common to mix black colour with a bit of dark blue to avoid excessive cracking. That could be a potential explanation.

  • BurningFrog a year ago

    A next step could be to "restore" those cracks in the image, and get an image of how it looked when new.

timzaman a year ago

I worked with several imaging and computer vision people at the rijksmuseum, including authors of this project. This team is actually extremely competent and professional. Usually surprising for governmental institutions, but this one is ace.

KaiserPro a year ago

I spent ages looking at this painting, and I still can't find commander vimes.

ikari_pl a year ago

I used to have it as a full wall wallpaper in the living room where I was growing up.

roflmaostc a year ago

Related to it, there is a company doing that for microscopy. Did an internship once there

https://gallery.ramonaoptics.com/gallery

nofunsir a year ago

reminds me of microsoft seadragon/photosynth

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seadragon_Software

  • tecleandor a year ago

    It's basically the same technique. Same as Google Maps too

    • brookst a year ago

      The tiled zoom thing is everywhere, and lots of museums publish high resolution images this way. There’s a handy tool to reconstruct an image at any zoom level from a url: https://dezoomify-rs.ophir.dev/

      • tecleandor a year ago

        Ah, I tiled (hundreds of?) thousands of things in my previous job, but I didn't know that dezoomify tool, thanks!

OldGuyInTheClub a year ago

This is a remarkable complement to seeing a work of art in person. We can get close through zoom in ways that we couldn't at the museum without putting the piece at risk.

dewarrn1 a year ago

This is cool! We visited the Rijksmuseum while they were doing the photography: automated but still painstaking work.

canjobear a year ago

It's a pdf, you can zoom in as much as you want? https://www.usenix.org/system/files/1311_05-08_mickens.pdf

Daub a year ago

Shortly after the painting was completed it was cropped so that it would fit on the wall. See if you can guess which edge was the victim.

Of the high resolution image itself... I teach painting and regularly use such images as teaching aids. I honesty belive that they have as much teaching value (or even more) than seeing the real thing. The details of paint applicationare magnificently clear in such images.

  • grumple a year ago
    • Daub a year ago

      Yes, but the left hand low was the largest and (in my opinion) the most noticeable. That being said the trim on the right makes the two right-most figures feel ‘wrong’ and the cropped bottom moves the central figure’s feet way too close to the edge.

      The structure of the painting is very common: a central figure surrounded by a semi-circle of figures. For an early and clear example look at The Tribute Money by Masaccio. The crop on the left plays hell with this structure. It also moves the central figure maddeningly close to the middle. Rembrandt would never have voluntarily placed a figure in the middle of a multi-figure composition.

ChrisMarshallNY a year ago

That’s quite well-done!

Much faster than most of these types of sites.

josefrichter a year ago

Did we just take down the website?

avazhi a year ago

Using artificial intelligence

No thanks

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