Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Perhaps an easier one to see in 3D?
Hey, my friend Dan suggested that the distance between the shots was too great and might make it hard for people to merge the images to see in 3D - He also correctly predicted that if the shots are taken closer together the flattening into planes (or "multiplane effect") would be less. These shots were taken from the same window about 12inches apart. Let me know what you think....
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Janice and Marty come for a visit...
We had a blast last month when my sister Janice and Marty came for a visit. They were in Paris (Marty was working) and chose to come down for a couple of nights to Lyon. We toured around and had some great meals and great laughs together. Unfortunately I didn't take too many pictures of our time together. Here's a couple of the first night when we had dinner at our apartment. Thanks for coming to visit you guys!! love ya.
cross-eyed stereos...
Hey, some people have requested cross-eyed versions. I had already made a couple so I'll post those "tout de suite"
There are some advantages to cross-eyed viewing but I find that there's a subtle psychological effect when you use the cross-eyed method. It makes the apparent image feel small and the effort required feels a bit straining. The parallel method feels the opposite. (not sure if it's the case for everyone but it's definitely true for me) At any rate here's a couple of cross eyed ones... (I'm curious what you think - please let me know. If people prefer these I'll post the others and future ones in cross views)
There are some advantages to cross-eyed viewing but I find that there's a subtle psychological effect when you use the cross-eyed method. It makes the apparent image feel small and the effort required feels a bit straining. The parallel method feels the opposite. (not sure if it's the case for everyone but it's definitely true for me) At any rate here's a couple of cross eyed ones... (I'm curious what you think - please let me know. If people prefer these I'll post the others and future ones in cross views)
Here's a few stereo images I've taken from our view of Lyon... To view, relax your gaze as if you're focusing on something far away - you'll see 4 images overlapping. Continue until you can merge the two middle images together to form the 3D stereo image. It might help some people to use the word "Lyon" with the red dot at the bottom to merge the images. Try it! (click on the image to see it larger - it's easier to merge if you back away from the computer screen a bit too) Let me know how it goes.
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