Yep, that worked and does show how the higher resolution photo contained more detail than the smaller one.
Ironically, I think you also produced an example that shows how more pixels in a photo doesn't always guarantee a more detailed picture. Both your photos are the same size (same number of pixels) yet the "watered down" (enlarged) photo shows less detail.
As I think more on this topic, I begin to realize that it is more complicated than what first meets the eye. In digital photography terminology,
resolution simply means
number of pixels. It doesn't tell you anything about the accuracy of those pixels. I think lots of confusion occurs because we intuitively think of resolution as meaning clarity, but it doesn't necessarily mean this at all. In any case more pixels (resolution) usually does show more detail, tho the degree of payoff is a function of many factors such as the camera, the photographer, the lighting, etc.
Here's a related topic that shows how the accuracy of the pixels makes a difference. Take color depth as an example. Each pixel can be assigned a finite number of colors. Here's what the same photo of the same resolution looks like with varying degrees of color choices:
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v310/Thuja/photography/colorDepth.jpg" border="0" alt="color depths: 16, 8, 4, 3, 2, 1, 1-bit">
color depths: 16, 8, 4, 3, 2, 1, 1-bit
(65,000 colors, 256 colors, 16 colors, 8 colors, 4 colors, and 2 colors (last 2 photos))
And of course the photos with lower color depth will produce much smaller file sizes, uncompressed as well as compressed. Anyway, it's 7 photos of one of my daughters!
