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01/02/2009 03:57:09 PM · #1 |
| Went and saw the movie bolt and it was in 3d....anyway I got the glasses and was wondering if anyone knows if and how to create photos that would be able to use the same 3d effect as the movie....looked around the net but couldn't find anything???? |
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01/02/2009 04:36:26 PM · #2 |
I've seen something on that -- I remember checking for a supply of the glasses, but it was a long time ago, and it will take some research. I expect someone will have an answer before then. :-)
It may be as simple as a Photoshop filter -- try searching through the menus for the weird stuff you'd never normally use at DPC ... |
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01/02/2009 05:04:11 PM · #3 |
Are your glasses the old style ones with one glass being a red frequency filter and the other one being a blue filter? If yes, read on. If no, please ignore.
A simple way of creating stereoscopic images is to render it axially displaced in two channels: Red and Blue. The two channels combined will will provide all the information needed to render the scene in teh brain... and the displacement will give the illusion of a third dimension.
I will share a tutorial/link as I can find one.
ETA: Heres a link.
Message edited by author 2009-01-02 17:05:52. |
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01/02/2009 05:06:53 PM · #4 |
| they are the new ones I know how to make 3d pictures with the red and blue.... |
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01/02/2009 05:08:30 PM · #5 |
| Oh ok. They may still be passive filters/polarizers since to have active polarization glasses for such large audiences will be very costly. |
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01/02/2009 05:14:54 PM · #6 |
I am sure you already found and read this, but just in case:
"Newer movie theater technologies use dual projectors and polarized images that you view using glasses with polarized lenses. Each polarized image can only be seen properly through the corresponding polarized lens."
"The bad news is that polarized technologies require expensive dual digital projectors that are not practical for home use. You cannot simply display polarized images on an HDTV. That means that the 3D movies available for home theater use do not use the same imaging technology and you cannot use the gray polarized glasses that you might have kept after viewing one of the current 3D flicks at the theater."
The source is here. |
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01/02/2009 05:22:03 PM · #7 |
| nevermind I found my answer..........have to have two images projected using polarized light one at -45 and +45 |
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01/02/2009 05:28:10 PM · #8 |
If you would be kind enough to post it here?
That is what I was hinting at. |
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01/03/2009 07:52:39 PM · #9 |
Share it with everyone, would you, selfish soul? ;-)
Message edited by author 2009-01-03 19:53:01. |
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