DSC06337 X-3D Boston at Night SW view - 30/11/07
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- Uploaded on December 2, 2007
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by Volkan YUKSEL
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Volkan YUKSEL, on December 3, 2007, said:
Metin Bey, bu fotograf cifti bir onceki fotografin 3 boyutlu versiyonu. Bu iki fotografi 3 adet gorecek kadar sasi baktiginizda, merkezdeki goruntunun 3 boyutlu oldugunu goreceksiniz. GE 3 boyutlu fotograflari genellikle secmiyor. Ama 3 boyutlu gorenbilenleri bu guzellikten mahrum etmek istemedim :)
Ilgilenirseniz 3 Boyutlu fotografcilik ile ilgili ile ilgili bilgi paylasimi yaptigimiz basligi da inceleyebilirsiniz.
Ilginize tesekkurler, selamlar, Volkan
Volkan YUKSEL, on December 16, 2007, said:
Very nice chinatown park. However, in order for me to see your parallel view 3D pairs, I have to download and convert to cross eyed 3D viewing using the SPM utility. Cheers, Volkan
Volkan YUKSEL, on December 17, 2007, said:
Yes Chinatown Park, all of my 3D work is purely for cross eyed viewing including this one. We refer to this type X-3D which I perhaps should tag them accordingly. But I didn't want to clatter tagging system unnecessarily in the past. Now it appears that it could be useful to prevent confusion.
When the images are in wrong order for cross eyed viewing, our brain perceives the near objects far, and far objects near. This can cause smoke coming out of our ears :)
I suggest that you should have the new beginners try with less complex images like the turtle pair in out 3D support and share page. Cheers, Volkan
Volkan YUKSEL, on December 17, 2007, said:
Chinatown Park, if you allow me I will repeat the principles of X-3D. When we are looking to something within our arms reach, our eyes automatically converge to point of attention by crossing the eyes. Of course each eye is seeing slightly different image for obvious reason, with that, our brain is perceiving the scene in 3D.
Knowing this natural behavior of our eyes; I prefer the cross eyed viewing technique like many other 3D community members of Panoramio agrees. According to this technique photo taken from LEFT goes to RIGHT and of course the photo taken from the RIGHT goes to LEFT.
Therefore when we look cross eyed to the pair sufficient enough to make an overlap, the LEFT eye sees the LEFT image and the RIGHT eye sees the RIGHT image and 3D perception begins.
As you know I am not a military aerospace intelligence person or spy with a dedicated airplane and camera for this purpose. Therefore my aerial 3D images can contain imperfection associated with non parallel shift movement due to flight path or altitude differences between the shots.[even Volkanzilla is not perfect:)] The Colorado Airpoto may contain all these. So don't make judgment on your abilities based on that image. Judge your abilities on simpler scenes like I mention earlier. If you have no problem with the turtle or the lifeless model or your own ones then you are OK.
Cheers, Volkan