by Chris Peterson » Sat Aug 22, 2020 8:49 pm
johnnydeep wrote: ↑Sat Aug 22, 2020 8:39 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Sat Aug 22, 2020 4:07 pm
johnnydeep wrote: ↑Sat Aug 22, 2020 4:00 pm
So are these supposed to be viewable in 3D somehow with or without special glasses? I can't manage to do it (though I don't have 3D glasses). I'd love to see a version of this 3D APOD in "Magic Eye" format -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Eye, though I'm sure much detail will be lost.
Stereo pairs are how 3D images are normally presented in scientific publications. Most people can view them, but it takes a little practice to decouple the direction your eyes are pointing from your focusing. You can also get
little viewers that make it easy. Like red/blue glasses, you still have to have them on hand, of course, but they allow for higher resolution viewing as well a viewing of color images.
I'm trying but all I get is a headache. Is the goal to have the two images merge visually? Focus off in the distance first? Does it matter what size the images are? How far away should the images be? (I can view Magic Eye images just fine.)
Magic Eye images are normally constructed for parallel eye viewing. The approach to viewing a stereo pair is the same- you relax your eyes to look "through" the pair of images until they merge, allowing them to be out of focus. Once they merge, you can usually then adjust your focus.
For small image pairs, crossed or parallel work equally well, depending on the person. But while most people can cross their eyes, very few can look outwards with both at the same time. So when viewing larger images, crossed-eyes work better. You cross your eyes until the images merge, again not worrying about focus, and once they're merged, you fix the focus. Merging usually produces a kind of "lock" (you get that with Magic Eye images, too, where everything wiggles around and then the merger snaps into place and is easy to hold). Once you're locked, you can, well,
focus on focus.
[quote=johnnydeep post_id=305458 time=1598128785 user_id=132061]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=305449 time=1598112429 user_id=117706]
[quote=johnnydeep post_id=305448 time=1598112049 user_id=132061]
So are these supposed to be viewable in 3D somehow with or without special glasses? I can't manage to do it (though I don't have 3D glasses). I'd love to see a version of this 3D APOD in "Magic Eye" format - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Eye, though I'm sure much detail will be lost.
[/quote]
Stereo pairs are how 3D images are normally presented in scientific publications. Most people can view them, but it takes a little practice to decouple the direction your eyes are pointing from your focusing. You can also get [url=https://www.amazon.com/Stereo-Wide-View-Viewer-Prints-Monitors/dp/B07DQT8QD6/ref=sr_1_6?dchild=1&keywords=stereo+pair+viewer&qid=1598112261&sr=8-6]little viewers[/url] that make it easy. Like red/blue glasses, you still have to have them on hand, of course, but they allow for higher resolution viewing as well a viewing of color images.
[/quote]
I'm trying but all I get is a headache. Is the goal to have the two images merge visually? Focus off in the distance first? Does it matter what size the images are? How far away should the images be? (I can view Magic Eye images just fine.)
[/quote]
Magic Eye images are normally constructed for parallel eye viewing. The approach to viewing a stereo pair is the same- you relax your eyes to look "through" the pair of images until they merge, allowing them to be out of focus. Once they merge, you can usually then adjust your focus.
For small image pairs, crossed or parallel work equally well, depending on the person. But while most people can cross their eyes, very few can look outwards with both at the same time. So when viewing larger images, crossed-eyes work better. You cross your eyes until the images merge, again not worrying about focus, and once they're merged, you fix the focus. Merging usually produces a kind of "lock" (you get that with Magic Eye images, too, where everything wiggles around and then the merger snaps into place and is easy to hold). Once you're locked, you can, well, [i]focus [/i]on focus.