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— Anaglyphs —
The Anaglyphs in the Gallery
Anaglyphs consist of two photographs, one each for the left and the
right eye and they must be colour coded. Several combinations are possible
as long as each individual eye only sees the picture made for it. Colour pictures
consist of the three basic colours red, green and blue. Green and blue together
make cyan. Red-cyan coded anaglyphs contain all basic colours. The anaglyphs in
this gallery are red-cyan coded and must be viewed with red-cyan goggles in
order to perceive the 3D-effect.
Objects depicted in the image can appear on the screen level, behind it or
in front of it. Objects that appear in front of the screen must not touch the image
frame because that interferes with the 3D effect. Fisheye lenses can also be used
as macro lenses. Circular fisheye lenses portray 180°, therefore feature a round
frame and look like the reflection in a mirror ball — those cover 360°,
however. Circular fisheye lenses are well suited to photograph anaglyphs handheld.
A near object in the centre of the picture appears to protrude from the screen and
everything else is farther away. Objects at the round image frame appear bent and
often at the screen plane or behind it.
Anaglyphs 1
First Anaglyphs Gallery with maximal 20 180° x 180° 3D images. The coloured
photograph for one eye appears below the anaglyph and is a bit smaller.
Anaglyphs 2
Second Anaglyphs Gallery with maximal 20 180° x 180° 3D images. The coloured
photograph for one eye appears below the anaglyph and is a bit smaller.
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