Category: Chester County
![Image for the Delaware Art Museum - "Eye on Nature" - Andrew Wyeth/John Ruskin](https://i0.wp.com/www.aseymour.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/111010.GPS_.Drive_.100.dpi_.jpg?fit=672%2C372)
I am not one that highlights my achievements too much, and I am sure it has cost me some views over the years.
Anyhow, to start the story of this adventure off, one has to go back to early December, when I received an email with the subject of “Image of Brandywine”, and the following thumbnail image.
![Fall (2011) image taken of the Brandywine River in Hibernia Park in Chester County PA.](https://i0.wp.com/www.aseymour.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/111010.GPS_.Drive_.hrd_.11.01.jpg?resize=300%2C200)
In the email, Margaretta said she was one of the curators at the Delaware Art Museum, and she was working with a exhibition designer, Keith, who had found my image online, and they were wondering if I would be interested in allowing the museum to use my image in a exhibition called “Eye on Nature“, comparing Andrew Wyeth and John Ruskin from March 10-27, 2018.
Also included with the email was a PDF file of proposed design layouts, and my image was already included, at a 11 feet by 17 feet!
After finishing the email, I had to walk around to catch my breath, and after a few minutes, I showed the email to my wife, and pointed to the address at the bottom.
Could this really be true?
The next day, I called the phone number provided, and the voicemail confirmed the name in the email, but I could only leave a message.
I did follow-up with an email, and the next day Margaretta followed up with a date and time to chat more about the exhibition.
As the day and time we agreed on, drew nearer, I was becoming more nervous, and when I finally made the call, I made sure that I had a large glass of water with me, so that I would not be too parched during the conversation.
Margaretta and I chatted for some time about the details of the exhibition, the exhibition designer and what I was looking for in compensation.
I remember blurting out a number, and I got the sense that I had blown the opportunity, but she responded back “Normally, I do not deal with living artists, but I’ll look into it.”
Internally, I giggled – “Normally, I do not deal with living artists…”
A couple of day pasted, and I had a change to speak with Keith the exhibition designer, and indeed confirmed the output size: 11 x 17 feet!
I told him of my printing background, but I had never dealt with anything of that size, but I knew of a technique that might allow me to get size required.
At this point, I was still not internally sure if I was in a dream or not, but after another phone call with Margaretta, and a couple days a waiting a check arrived from the museum!
My thought, “Hold S***, this is for REAL!!”
Now I had to start working on getting the image ready for Keith the exhibition designer.
At first, I corrected some image issues on the original image file that were cosmetic in nature because of my use of several images (ghosting), and then I began to tweak some of the various tones, basically reducing some of the ‘hot spots’, and eventually, I created the following image.
![Image for the Delaware Art Museum - "Eye on Nature" - Andrew Wyeth/John Ruskin exhibition](https://i0.wp.com/www.aseymour.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/111010.GPS_.Drive_.100.dpi_.jpg?resize=300%2C200)
Now, the fun part… Getting the image to the right size… 11 x 17 feet…
I used the basic technique that I have outlined before (See my post “Fine Art prints done local“, section “Going Big”), but instead of 110%, I used 105%.
I created a Photoshop action, and repeated, and repeated until Photoshop crashed, and corrupted the image.
In troubleshooting the crash, I found out that I had filled my 128 GB SSD drive used for the Photoshop scratch/VM file! (My machine has 32 GBs of physical RAM)
In Photoshop, I re- targeted the scratch/VM file to one of my 4 TB hard drives and began the resizing again.
After numerous resizes, and quick “save-as” files, I finally reached 16.57 x 11.0 feet or 198.887 x 132.733 inches or 19889×13273 pixels (@300 dpi)!
Within the file, I still had a couple of correction layers, but the file size was approximately 19.2 GBs! By FAR the largest single file I have ever worked on, and had to save it a PSB file (See my post “Large Image Files – PSB vs TIFF“)
Note – Large PSB files are STILL not visible within Lightroom Classic CC, version 7.2. — Adobe, are you listening? It’s been 7+ years since I reported/blogged about this!
Any how, I created several different DPI files (and file size(s)):
- 100 dpi psb – 565.487 MBs
- 100 dpi tiff – 773.447 MBs
- 150 dpi psb – 1,277.122 MBs
- 150 dpi tiff – 1,740.209 MBs
- 200 dpi psb – 2,455.681 MBs
- 200 dpi tiff – 3,093.681 MBs
- 300 dpi psb – 5,212.382 MBs
and placed them on my FTP server for Keith to download.
Note – For those techno-geeks, PSB creates significantly smaller files, when compared to TIFF, but as mentioned above, Lightroom STILL can not produce thumbnails within light room.
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