Mon, Jul 8, 1:33 PM CDT

Como Conservatory balustrade ANAGLYPH

Photography Architecture posted on Jun 17, 2004
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Description


You'll need to get out your red/blue anaglyph 3D glasses for this one, kids ! ~ although, some have said they like this one even without viewing the stereogprahic effect.

Comments (7)


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Dianthus

12:39AM | Thu, 17 June 2004

Lucky i still had 3D glasses from Spykids movie. Nice and different presentation.

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RedundantlyAbundant

12:43AM | Thu, 17 June 2004

Aww gee! I am gonna pick up some of those glasses for sure! I have always wanted to make one of these. I do like this as it is though. :)

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Vik9740

3:06AM | Thu, 17 June 2004

this is a very cool effect! i really like the look!

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Digimon

6:53AM | Thu, 17 June 2004

Well you know how much I like this one! the seperation is marvelous! To those who do not have 3D glasses, they are cheap!! This is a great image!!

cynlee

3:20PM | Thu, 17 June 2004

grabbin my glasses ...ah! cool! i just luv these :]

lcady

9:52PM | Thu, 17 June 2004

This is a very good anaglyph! I agree that glasses are not required to appreciate this anaglyph. Are there three images, a red, a blue and a black? Are you willing to divulge your technique?

WhiteStag

3:30AM | Sun, 20 June 2004

(A few other artists here have posted anaglyphs.) They all start with two pictures, made parallel but separated about 2 1/2 inches apart, just like as seen by two eyes. I am making mine free held but there are tripod adapters, conversion lenses, and stereo cameras that yield really proper alignments and I plan to get some of that. Try not to rotate the frame or change the forward angle when making free shots, we don't try to use paralax, and keystoning of the image, or anything moving to a new position between shots including moving water, tend to simply mess up the illusion. However, you can control or exaggerate the depth effect by varying the distance (but too large a variation is bad), and for macros it is safer to slightly decrease, for telephoto shots to slightly increase, distance between the shots. The cheap software I am using to autogenerate anaglyphs & stereo-pairs is called PokeScope (I don't endorse it I just use it, it's easy to find but I bet there are a number of similar, and once you see the logic you can do this in Photoshop, but PokeScope does let me set crosshairs on a same object in both pictures to pull the alignment up right - and where you place the crosshairs will influence where the center of depth perception will fall, it also can crop all sides to eliminate partials and ghosting. Once I get ahold of a cheap viewer for them I will make more stereo-pairs but, the red/blue glasses are generally cheap and easy to find & use. You can print pairs to fit various including the antique StereoOpticon viewers.) The doubled image is red and blue, but where the two overlap this program is allowing colour to remain, so these anaglyphs do have somewhat colour in them, if the glasses let it through. Stereo-pairs tend to look really awesome, but it is good to keep anaglyphs bright as possible, especially in printed form, since the light is filtered out by the glasses (which is why I tried a PS filter technique and this time it came out nice) (technically, it's good to get the colours right, to match the filters in the glasses.) Awfully condensed I know ! ~ does that help enough?


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