beos53 opened this issue on Mar 30, 2012 · 4 posts
beos53 posted Fri, 30 March 2012 at 12:14 AM
to see the image as I tried to make it you need red and blue glasses
If you look at, what do you think of it
As I said this is my first time at this, so any comments that will help make it better please let me know
Steve
PoserPro 2014, Windows 7, AMD FX-6300 6 core, 8 GB ram, Nvidia
GeForce GTX 750 Ti
timarender posted Fri, 30 March 2012 at 3:54 AM
Strictly speaking, I beleive the glasses colours are 'Red & Cyan'. Not 'Red and Blue'.
How did you work out how far apart the 2 cameras were positioned. That is, I think, called the interoccular distance.
Although specatacular, some anaglyph creators prefer the objects not to appear in front of the screen; and to have all objects appearing behind the screen.
Some of the objects appeared not to have any depth. The trees, although positioned in the 3d space appear to look flat.
A good first attempt.
[Indidentally. I recently did a similar test to create an MPO file; which allows the 3d image to be viewed on those 3d TVs.]
ToxicWolf posted Fri, 30 March 2012 at 10:24 AM
Attached Link: Poser 3D
Nice work. I've only done this one with Poser. Not much call for themPoser Pro 2012 SR3
Windows 7 Professional 64 bit
Intel Core I7 990x 3.46G 6 core
24G RAM
EVGA GTX580 R Video Card
Single HP LP2475 1920x1200 monitor
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mrsparky posted Fri, 30 March 2012 at 7:40 PM
Attached Link: http://www.poserdirect.com/concepts.html
Good start. Like the window as a framing device. Also Like timarender says for best results think distance between objects. Easy way is think of 3 zones, background, midground and foreground. Some more tips and ideas can be found in some tuts/notes at the link shown above. These also cover static anahlyphs as well as video. timarender - out of interest how did you convert the renders to .mpo?