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p.5 #7 · Where does the 3D look come from? | |
I think that the degree of any photo's 3-D effect is determined by how REAL the photo appears to our brain.
The question is what makes a photograph seem real to our brain? 
Personally, I think the effect is dependent on how the photographic system handles the interaction of light with the elements in the picture, and how well this approximates how our brain perceives the world through our eyes.
Personally, I think every part of the photographic system plays a role - including lenses, processing - and - the sensor design of the camera.
I have always felt that Fuji P&S's, some Oly P&S's, and, often, Nikon DSLR's show the 3-D effect more than my Canon CMOS sensor. Nikon P&S's, on the other hand, have always seemed to deliver flat pix, to my eyes, at least. Why
Shooting from the hip, I would venture that is has something to do white balance, and the sensitivity and smoothness of the system to the contrasts of light from highlights through mids to blacks.
Since B&W photos do indeed show this 3-D effec, the quality of these lighting contrasts likely have to do with the luminosity aspects, not chrominance.
As other folks have suggested, it may have to do with edges and pixil level contrasts. Interestingly, the Fuji CCD chips have a different pixil geometry than other CCD chips, with a supposedly better accuracy for line edges at 45 degree angles than other chips.
Yet, CMOS-chipped Canon cams can and do show the 3-D effect. Do they require more extraordinary natural lighting then other systems to produce equal effects? Can a simple lens substitution override sensor design?
I wish I knew more about micro- and macro-contrasts and how the human body perceives them. And how various sensors and lenses transmit them, for that is where I think the answer to the 3-D question may well be found.
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