

3D. See Spinography.
Anaglyph.
A stereograph with two images on top of eachother. One image is red and
one is blue. The images are then viewed through red and blue glasses.
Other colors are sometimes used. Not he best way to view color images.
Cha cha. Taking stereo pairs with one camera by shooting one picture, then shifting your weight to the other foot and shooting another.
Free-viewing.
Many people cannot view stereo pairs without the aid of a viewer. It
takes some practice and can cause headaches in some people.
Holography.
Invented in theory by Dr. Dennis Gabor at Imperial College of London in
1948, holograms were not practical until the ruby laser was invented in
1960 by T.A. Mainman of Hughes Aircraft. Today, holograms are made with
lasers and produce images that one can practically touch. Some appear
to float in space in front of the frame, and they change perspective as
you walk left and right. Holograms are monochromatic, and no special
viewers or glasses are necessary, although proper lighting is
important. To make a hologram, lenthy exposures are required with
illumination by laser beams that must be carefully set up to travel a
path with precisely positioned mirrors, beam splitters, lenses, and
special film. The technology moved rapidly in the 1960s, and in the
1970s a handful of artists began playing in hologram labs. Many of us
expected Star Wars-like projections of holograms to be just around the
corner, but the technology has not advanced much since then.
3D Glossary:
Hyperstereo.
Hyperstereo is when the lenses are separated by more than 2.5". The
feeling that one is looking through the eyes of a giant is often the
result. This is done commonly for landscapes or images when objects are
far away.
Hypostereo. When the lenses are separated by less than 2.5". This is common in macro, or closeup work.
Lenticulars.
Remember the plastic baseball cards and Cracker Jack prizes with images
that moved when you tilted them? Called lenticular prints, these cards
are made of thousands of tiny plastic lenses and the images are layered
so they can give the sense of dimension or motion.
Lorgnette.
A handheld pair of lenses that helps people view stereographs. Plastic
lorgnettes cost as little at $3, and quality glass lensed lorgnettes
may cost $100 or more.
Magic Eye. Paintings and computer generated optical illusions that, if one can freeview, reveal hidden images of shapes and objects.
Ortho stereo. The ideal position and distance for viewing a stereo image.
Panorama pictures. Pictures taken of the world around you as if you were turning around in a circle. Click here to see examples.
Photo bubble or photo sphere or photo cube.
A form of panorama picture made of photos usually taken with a fisheye
lens. They are then stitched together to produce a photo sphere or
cube. The viewer can see all around, above, and below. Click here to
see examples.
Pulfrich stereo.
Stereo video taken by rolling a camera sideways at a right angle to an
object. When played back the viewer wears glasses with one eye
unobstructed, and the other through a darker lens. The brain is fooled
into processing frames of the video in sequence, and the result is a
moving stereo image in color.
Realist format. 35 mm film images that are 24 x 23 mm. Regular 35 mm images are 24 x 36 mm.
Spinography.
This is done by walking around an object and taking pictures every
10-20 degrees, or putting the camera on a tripod and an object on a
turntable and rotating it 10-20 degrees between shots. It can also be
done with 3D modeling software by a computer. It does not create the
same sense of depth as stereographics. To view spinography on a
computer you usually need a small program for your browser called a
plug-in. Click here to see examples.
Stereo blind. A term describing people who cannot fuse two images into one with depth (stereopsis).
Stereographs or stereograms or stereopairs.
Two images made from different points of view that are side by side.
When viewed with a special viewer the effect is remarkably similar to
seeing the objects in reality. Stereocards are stereopairs mounted on a
piece of cardboard, usually 7" x 3.5". Click here to see examples.
Stereojet prints.
Stereojet prints are startlingly beautiful. Made of a special
transparency material with polarized images inkjetted onto each side,
they can be displayed as transparencies or mounted against a reflective
background and can be made up to poster size. They are viewed with an
inexpensive pair of polarized lenses made for stereo viewing. Regular
sunglasses will usually not work because the lenses are mounted at the
wrong angle of polarization. Colors are truer than anaglyphs, and when
properly lit, they look very real.
Stereopsis. The blending of stereopairs by the brain.
Stereo window.
If a window pane were placed between the edges of a stereopair, the
plane is called the stereo window. If the objects appear to be closer
to the viewer than this plane it is called breaking the window.
VR or Virtual Reality.
VR is a computer generated immersive realm that respond to interaction
by the viewer. Usually the viewer wears goggles or a helmet, and often
includes gloves and boots to simulate reaching, touching, and walking.
As computers and imaging technologies improve, VR is approaching R.
Many 3D tools are called VR, but they are not (see VRML). Although they
allow you to see all sides of an object by rotating it, you are still
seeing only two dimensions at a time.
VRML (Virtual Reality Markup Language). A set of standards for spinography software. Images are not really VR.
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