Here are instructions for making stereo photos: http://www.mineralarts.com/stereo/howto.html
. Google will turn up many more.
Several years ago I fooled around with this, first using a slide to
mount my Elan II on so I could take two pictures sequentially. Then,
I mounted the prints side by side and viewed them with an antique
stereopticon. Next, I bought two single use cameras, mounted them
side by side and exposed both at the same time. Again, I mounted them
the same way. Finally, I followed similar instructions as in the
website and prepared anaglyphs with Photoshop 5 from some of them.
These were viewed either on the monitor or as prints. I made my own
glasses from red and blue plastic. These images appear as black and
white.
Your photos are stunning, but I can't screw up my eyes to see them in
stereo. It's not easy with trifocals! I'd have to print them. But
you can convert them to red and blue anaglyphs. Then I could see
them, albeit in black and white.
Roger
On 1 Feb 2009, at 8:48 PM, lookaround360@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I put up some stereo digicam pics of the 2009 Detroit International
Auto
Show.
http://www.panoramacamera.us/autoshow-09stereo.html
This is the first time I've done two digicams. It is important that
they
are identical and set up the same. Might even need to check that the
firmware is identical. Also it will work smoother if both memory cards
are the same speed.
You have to learn to do the cross-eyed thing. Relax your slightly
crossed vision and tilt your head until it works. The head tilting
usually does it. One day I'll have to work out a filter (blue/amber?)
system. Anybody know more about doing that with PS?
AZ
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