DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

DPChallenge Forums >> Individual Photograph Discussion >> 3d?
Pages:  
Showing posts 1 - 8 of 8, (reverse)
AuthorThread
11/17/2004 10:44:41 PM · #1
I was playing around trying to get some more effects and I took this thru a foggy window that had a screen on it. Tried the compression Neil talked about on e301's thread, with jpeg2.
Is it just because of the colors that the red seems to be two layers above the background, especially the center leaf? Does anyone else see it? Sorry about it not being good or anything, but, I guess I've never made a picture that has such a 3d quality.
11/17/2004 11:44:43 PM · #2
Hmmm. Not really seeing it. Ever try a stereoscopic image?



This is kind of a crappy example, I am working on a project where I am taking stereoscopic images of the buildings at night around campus for the hell of it.

HOWTO:

"If the images are small enough so that one image fits between your eyes, the stereoscopic image can usually be viewed without the aid of any viewing device here's how. . .

1. Hold your head close to the image pair so that your right eye is over the right image and your left eye is over the left image. If you are wearing glasses, you may want to remove them.

2. Look straight ahead and imagine that you are looking at an image which is far away (gaze through the screen). The stereo images should be fuzzy.

3. Slowly pull your head away from the screen while maintaining your gaze. The two images will become four images. Concentrate on a point which is behind the screen.

4. Eventually the four images will merge into three images. The center image should be in stereo. You may need to rotate your head slightly to the right or left."
11/17/2004 11:53:21 PM · #3
Originally posted by VisiBlanco:

Hmmm. Not really seeing it. Ever try a stereoscopic image?



This is kind of a crappy example, I am working on a project where I am taking stereoscopic images of the buildings at night around campus for the hell of it.

HOWTO:

"If the images are small enough so that one image fits between your eyes, the stereoscopic image can usually be viewed without the aid of any viewing device here's how. . .

1. Hold your head close to the image pair so that your right eye is over the right image and your left eye is over the left image. If you are wearing glasses, you may want to remove them.

2. Look straight ahead and imagine that you are looking at an image which is far away (gaze through the screen). The stereo images should be fuzzy.

3. Slowly pull your head away from the screen while maintaining your gaze. The two images will become four images. Concentrate on a point which is behind the screen.

4. Eventually the four images will merge into three images. The center image should be in stereo. You may need to rotate your head slightly to the right or left."


It worked for me on your image. Very creepy. But I had to relax the hell outta my eyes ;)
11/18/2004 01:00:24 AM · #4
Great...now I'm permanantly Cross Eyed!
11/18/2004 01:17:57 AM · #5
Originally posted by pcody:

I was playing around trying to get some more effects and I took this thru a foggy window that had a screen on it. Tried the compression Neil talked about on e301's thread, with jpeg2.
Is it just because of the colors that the red seems to be two layers above the background, especially the center leaf? Does anyone else see it? Sorry about it not being good or anything, but, I guess I've never made a picture that has such a 3d quality.


Dude, I totally see the 3D. That's awesome.
11/18/2004 01:29:45 AM · #6
Thank you. I'm glad I'm not the only one that can see it. I'm a female. :O
11/18/2004 08:17:04 AM · #7
Originally posted by pcody:

Thank you. I'm glad I'm not the only one that can see it. I'm a female. :O

you could try ticking the gender box on the preferences page to get the F icon
11/18/2004 08:24:51 AM · #8
You're right. I could do that. Thanks for letting me know.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 09/13/2025 10:42:18 AM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 09/13/2025 10:42:18 AM EDT.