gastenpagina | View-Master | Site map | ||||
Model D in 3D | ||||||
Historie | Camera's | Startpagina | Projectoren | Schijven | Boeken | Accessoires |
Kijkers | model D |
|
|
De volgorde van de plaatjes is Linker oog - Rechter oog - Linker oog. Dus bij normaal (parallel) kijken de 1ste en 2de foto en bij gekruist kijken naar de 2de en 3de foto. Veel succes en niet te lang, als je last van je ogen krijg ! Probeer het dan later nog eens, bv. als je niet te moe bent. Deze en meer 3D-foto's zijn te zien op www.photo-3d.com . Copyright ©1999 by Michael Kersenbrock |
|
|
|
|
|
|
View images "straight" | View images "cross-eyed" |
View these images with eyes relaxed, like you were
looking at the horizon. It's the same technique one uses for looking at those "3D" prints with all the dots. Putting a piece of paper or cardboard between one's eyes perpendicular to the boundary between the two images may help. Moving closer or further away from the screen can be experimented with. I'm near-sighted, and I do best with my contacts/glasses off and looking relatively close up to the screen. Try what works best for you. Because image pairs show up with slightly different
|
These images are "backwards" with the left eye's
image on the right and the right eye's image on the left. If one then crosses one's eyes the "right amount" the left eye will see the left eye's image (on the right) and vice versa. Trick is to "adjust" the amount one's eyes are crossed so that the images seem to overlap, and at that point they "click" together and becomes 3D! To reduce strain, especially when first starting, it can be helpful to sit back away from the screen so that the amount of cross-eye'ing is reduced. This method isn't subject to variations in image size
|