p.1 #2 · Physautotypes & Featured at Wall Space Gallery
Fascinating! And congratulations. The Woodburytype was especially intriguing. (I admit I fancy the portrait style and look from that era and the interesting characters so often photographed - no plastic beauty there!)
BTW, the twin images from December 7 look to be from the same negative but viewed with the crossed eyes technique they render a quite nice 3D view.
p.1 #3 · Physautotypes & Featured at Wall Space Gallery
...love your 3D approach. I actually recently had 4 self portraits made in stereo and
comes with a whole 3D wood viewer. Really pretty object too. I like very much the idea
of images as objects rather than left in the ether of numbers.
p.1 #4 · Physautotypes & Featured at Wall Space Gallery
At university, more years ago than I hate to think about, I had a geology course. We had 3D maps and special glasses to view them. The instructor never bothered with the glasses. I learned from him you can view the pair in 3D by crossing your eyes. Works well, but can take a bit of practice to master. The old 3D from the late 19th and early 20th centuries is quite interesting.
p.1 #5 · Physautotypes & Featured at Wall Space Gallery
AuntiPode wrote:
At university, more years ago than I hate to think about, I had a geology course. We had 3D maps and special glasses to view them. The instructor never bothered with the glasses. I learned from him you can view the pair in 3D by crossing your eyes. Works well, but can take a bit of practice to master. The old 3D from the late 19th and early 20th centuries is quite interesting.
My mother-in-law and step father-in-law (who is 86), just bought a new 47" flat screen. The salesman upsold them to 3D. They don't even have a BD player, much less a 3D BD player. Besides, my step father-in-law is blind in one eye. I didn't even go there.
p.1 #7 · Physautotypes & Featured at Wall Space Gallery
I enjoyed the Woodburytype video too. Very interesting indeed. Normal pressed images require dithering; I wonder if they can implement a modern version of this for creating magazines; true flawless no dither images in magazines would be a wonderful thing.