Steve Wessing  


 Dog Cubes by Steve Wessing

August 2019 - Dog Cubes

August 2019 - Steve Wessing

Anaglyph

About the Image(s)

This image began as a cha-cha close up of my dog.
I used an app called Mirror Lab. I chose a process called 'Ice Cubes' to alter the left and right images separately. I adjusted the color in Samsung Photo Editor Pro, then used 3dSteroidPro to create the stereo pair and anaglyph.


This round’s discussion is now closed!
10 comments posted




Betty Drinkut   Betty Drinkut
I like the concept but cannot view this as a stereo view. :(   Posted: 08/14/2019 10:04:55
Steve Wessing   Steve Wessing
I can understand the difficulty, with so many squares. Just merge the dots above the image and it should be clear.   Posted: 08/14/2019 11:12:56



Brian Davis   Brian Davis
Sorry Steve but I cannot view or have been taught how to view the three images so I have to view the anaglyph which I find very confusing   Posted: 08/14/2019 16:38:56



 
I also cannot get the full 3D effect on this image. The squares are making it difficult to see any depth. The anaglyph works a little better.   Posted: 08/15/2019 19:55:01



Steve Wessing   Steve Wessing
Maybe it will be easier with a standard pair...   Posted: 08/15/2019 22:32:39
Comment Image



David Allen   David Allen
Like others, that's a hard one to view. We are too accustomed to seeing 3D images that are not all chopped up. Did you just run both images through the app or did you have to work on the images after to get the depth? Really looks like seeing a giant dog behind some of those old 4" square glass bricks that were popular in the 60s. I wish I had my 3d monitor working with glasses so I could see it without crossing my eyes.   Posted: 08/16/2019 12:37:44
Steve Wessing   Steve Wessing
I created the depth in the original stereo pair, then used the same settings in the app for each side. Your description of the giant dog behind glass bricks, is exactly the effect I wanted. I'm glad at least someone could see it.   Posted: 08/16/2019 12:49:04



Dr V G Mohanan Nair   Dr V G Mohanan Nair
Your concept looks good, but I think this works better in 2D than in 3D. I too find it difficult to view in parallel or cross-eye view. It looks a little better in anaglyph.   Posted: 08/17/2019 12:01:36



Signe Emmerich   Signe Emmerich
I can sort of get the 3D by crossing my eyes on the LRL but only on the middle three rows of blocks. The nose appears to have some depth while the outside rows don't add anything to the effects. And I really like the nose view by itself. The one eye showing is a little freaky though. Anyway, it was an interesting approach and thanks for sharing.   Posted: 08/18/2019 00:51:56



Steve Wessing   Steve Wessing
Thank you for your comments. I guess the somewhat abstract nature of the image, combined with the repeating squares, made it hard to decide which squares to merge and where to focus. I have no problem merging it correctly, but I'm already familiar with the image so my eyes know where to look. I'm curious how people will see it when projected.   Posted: 08/22/2019 14:30:25