Using a nifty technique and camera setup that I recently built, I now have the ability to take pictures in 3D. This one is just an example of my old faked 3D design. Its fake because it was only shot with one camera, and a program is used to make it more able to visually pop in 3D. More pictures to come will be using the new camera setup.
Oh, and you have to use those cruddy Red Blue glasses you sometimes find in 3D movies, or can order them online.
Oh, and you have to use those cruddy Red Blue glasses you sometimes find in 3D movies, or can order them online.
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Good eye, I do believe you're right. Alot of my favorite pictures are from that area. Now however I'm up here in Bellingham, so my photography will now be more in the area of Mt. Baker and that area. When we go up gold panning the areas around us are often times very picturesque.
For this to work properly, wouldn't it require two different perspectives, e.g. two separate images taken from two different/adjacent locations? If you overlap a cyan and red version of the same image, even with 3D glasses, it won't produce any sort of 3D effect and you'll just have an image that looks the same except with more color funkiness.
The program I use simulates the effect of two images. While it 'tries' fairly well, and does achieve the 3D effect via the Red-Blue classic 3D glasses, it is not true 3D. I have to re-take many of my favorite pictures with the my new camera setup, which alas will take me an extreme amount of time. For now on the older shots that are compatible to the process, I will apply the psudo-3D process to them. This kind of process takes some practice to get just right. As with everything, Practice makes perfect, but in this case practice makes art. ;)
The second method of using two separate images is my current process with new pictures. I use a pair of Canon S3is cameras that are on a special mount and set to fire at the same time using a custom configuration and hand made firing switch.
This shot actually looks half decent with the red-blue glasses. For some folks it often messes with their heads a little bit, and indeed the colors do tend to go out of whack if you look too long at the image. Using the Red-Blue glasses for any duration can really mess your eyes up in odd and interesting ways *nodnod's*
The second method of using two separate images is my current process with new pictures. I use a pair of Canon S3is cameras that are on a special mount and set to fire at the same time using a custom configuration and hand made firing switch.
This shot actually looks half decent with the red-blue glasses. For some folks it often messes with their heads a little bit, and indeed the colors do tend to go out of whack if you look too long at the image. Using the Red-Blue glasses for any duration can really mess your eyes up in odd and interesting ways *nodnod's*
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