Try this to train your eyes: Hold your index finger close to the screen. Slowly move your finger toward your face - keep your focus on your finger tip. At some point, the images should merge into 1 apparent 3D image between the 2 "real" images. If you do this enough, your eyes & brain will learn how to see the 3D merged image without your finger.
Fred
On Feb 3, 2009, at 1:07 PM, David Dyer-Bennet wrote: On Mon, February 2, 2009 16:14, karl shah-jenner wrote: David:
I can never get them to resolve into one image at all; I get a narrow
strip in the middle that's from both images, but much wider flaps on
each
side that are individual. Which direction head tilt are you suggest?
sit as far back as you need David until they resolve into a single image.
the further back, the less 'crossing' you'll need to do. When the image
does resolve you'll find it quite easy to move forward as your eyes will
relax once they see something they feel comfortable seeing
I can get smaller images to work pretty consistently; I seem to find "parallel" freeviewing easier than "cross", though. The parallel example at <
lfire.com/ca/erker/freeview.html">http://www.angelfire.com/ca/erker/freeview.html> leapt into 3D instantly for me. Mostly I get their cross example in reverse perspective, meaning I'm not crossing.
The movements of the images make me think my eyes are crossing, though.
Still playing with various advice.
-- David Dyer-Bennet, dd-b@xxxxxxxx; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info
NEW POSTS 1/29/2009 including "The Flights of Stairs"
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