Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Torre Agbar

 
Torre Agbar in Barcelona, Spain
 
Edit 1 (ISS pixels removed)
Reason
This is a very high res vertical panoramic image of a landmark skyscraper building in Barcelona. Being a somewhat simple cropped side-on view, the wow factor may be somewhat low, but the wow for me is in the amazing detail and architecture, somewhat reminiscent of the 30 St Mary Axe building in London but also very distinct.
Articles this image appears in
Torre Agbar and Barcelona
Creator
Diliff
Nominator
Diliff | (Talk) (Contribs)
 
the ISS?
 
Definately.

Comment: Diliff - assuming the stitched composite is downsampled, could we see a full-size view of that "hot pixel"? As is, it does look like a hot one, with jpg artifacts. But if it's more than one pixel in your original, it's either a high-flying bird or plane - or the ISS? --Janke | Talk 17:59, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

 
Original RAW crop at 3200%

**Heres the 100% crop (actually magnified to 3200% or so) taken straight out of the RAW file and saved as PNG. Still possibly a hot pixel (due to the Bayer algorithm) but as I said, I've never noticed it in the past or in any other images. In fact, I actually took two sets of panoramas at lightly different focal lengths and I just compared the same location in both images and there is no hot pixel at the same coordinate in the other, nor is there a 'UFO' in the other panorama set. Whatever it was, it was there during the panorama featured here, but gone 1:33 seconds later. My conclusion: Not a hot pixel - likely a satellite or possibly a high flying distant bird. At a focal length of 150mm, I can't imagine anything but a satellite being a mere couple of pixels on a 13 megapixel camera. Diliff | (Talk) (Contribs) 00:09, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

        • ... If you geocoded it and included an accurate timestamp we could tell if it was a satellite. :) (hint hint) .. although about the only satellite you'd see during the day is an iridium. ... You didn't happen to really taken this on the 7th at about 9am local time? [2] did you? Guess not.. 19deg is too low for that UFO anyways. --Gmaxwell 02:50, 2 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Very Weak Support - I agree with Janke and looks like David agrees too. But this building is amazing at night. I would strongly support a night shot. --Arad 22:10, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support. The building is surrounded by buildings; you can't do much about that. But that mysterious object ruins it for me. We can't have imperfections of that magnitude in any image. It's elementary; if you're going to photograph something, take it at an angle that excludes the distractions! I can't believe such a simple rule could be so blatently ignored. And for what? Attention?! I really should just strongly oppose, it's so distracting, but I suppose I'll follow consensus and stick with my vote. --Tewy 03:29, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
    • The artistic genius that is EDIT 1 fixed that monstrosity. Vote for it, I want to get a picture featured for once! --frothT 04:16, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
      • Yeah...on second thought, the speck adds significantly to the image. There's no way in a million years that it could be captured just so. I mean really, it's just floating in the sky! That's incredible! And the enc, oh, the enc! Can it get any better? I don't think so. Removing the object is like removing the subject itself, so I simply cannot support your edit. --Tewy 04:25, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support - and for the record - you guys have far too much time on your hands! --Joopercoopers 00:23, 3 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Promoted Image:Torre Agbar - Barcelona, Spain - Jan 2007.jpg --KFP (talk | contribs) 21:37, 8 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]