Saturday, March 13, 2010

James Cameron Owes Me $500 Million

For various reasons having nothing to do with current hit movies (really), I got up this morning wanting to play with 3-D. The theory is simple; the application is hard. If you've got a pair of the ol' red-and-blue 3-D glasses handy (and who doesn't?), check out my first black-and-white anaglyphs:

The idea is to take two photos of the same scene a couple inches apart to mimic the stereoscopic view of your two eyes. Tint the right image red and the left image cyan, as below (in Photoshop, you can convert the images to Grayscale and then Monotone). Overlap them transparently (in Photoshop, "Multiply" the top layer) and you're done. Quick and easy. In theory.
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Two pics from slightly different angles stand in for your left and right eyes.

In reality, it can be tricky to get the two layers to line up right. The depth of field--which parts pop out and which recede--is determined by how you match up the images. Any little difference between the photos, like if you tilt the camera a bit or the wind blows a branch, can ruin the illusion. I've learned that choosing the right subject and being the right distance from it is important. These three experiments turned out best, but I've got six or seven others that hardly worked at all. I also tried some techniques that give a more full-color effect, but I wasn't happy with those either.
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Whenever I'm in an antique store, I love checking out those old stereo viewers and cards that were all the rage in Victorian times. The original Viewmasters. I could imagine myself going nuts collecting hundreds of those cards someday. The red-blue technique's not the same, but seeing a picture pop off the page is just as magical as ever.
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4 comments:

  1. Oh, great. There goes another weekend. ;-)

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  2. I know! As if we have the time. I've been wanting to give this a shot for a long time though, and once I got to it it was pretty easy. If you're serious, I can send you more details about how I made these.

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  3. Oh, you bet I'm interested! I'm going to try to carve out some time next weekend to try my hand at it.

    Meanwhile, here's one for you. I'd try to pass it off as one of my own, but I don't think you'd fall for it.

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  4. Thanks for the Phobos pic. Sweet! I need to find more of those.

    I've privately e-mailed you a step-by-step description of my method. Let me know how it goes, and if you have any suggestions for improvement.

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