watched a video on filming 3d and they said that for every 30 feet way of distance to the object, the center of the lens should be 1 foot apart. hope this helps. and toe in does vary the effect too as you know.
Its great to seeing how you reasearch and improve the method on how to do 3d video content as real as possible.
I am an amateur researcher in this field and i want to share something with you:
I quite say that i was astounded about this particular video: watch?v=9M4Z2pMfj-Q in which is it said that a TV is actually been able to generate 3d content for human eyes without wearing any kind of glasses or tech devices..
That felt a lot more natural when viewing cross-eyed.
I know Fuji have a twin-lens, 3d compact camera ready to be launched(saw it on Engadget about 2 weeks ago) that does video also. Should be worth checking out.
In my opinion, to maximize a 3D effect, there needs to be things in the fore, middle and background.
A lot of folks also make the mistake of having the lenses more then regular eye width apart, which ruins any effect - good job for realizing this.
Great ... thanks for watching ... not a very exciting video but probably my best 3D filming because both cameras are identical etc ... will try one more time with cameras toed-in a little, just like our own eyes :)
I don't have a funky viewer, or the red-green glasses, but I tried the cross-eye technique and it works pretty well... although my eyes started hurting after a minute or so!! Looks pretty neat though.... 3D effect is quite pronounced.
watched a video on filming 3d and they said that for every 30 feet way of distance to the object, the center of the lens should be 1 foot apart. hope this helps. and toe in does vary the effect too as you know.
sprocket2cog 1 year ago
Cool!! ^^ But I can not watch it in the blue/red HQ version, since I don't have anaglyphic glasses. I had to watch it from your channel.
Sylphadora 2 years ago
Its great to seeing how you reasearch and improve the method on how to do 3d video content as real as possible.
I am an amateur researcher in this field and i want to share something with you:
I quite say that i was astounded about this particular video: watch?v=9M4Z2pMfj-Q in which is it said that a TV is actually been able to generate 3d content for human eyes without wearing any kind of glasses or tech devices..
I'm looking forward to this kind of technology.
I hope you like it.
dpatulea 2 years ago
That felt a lot more natural when viewing cross-eyed.
I know Fuji have a twin-lens, 3d compact camera ready to be launched(saw it on Engadget about 2 weeks ago) that does video also. Should be worth checking out.
In my opinion, to maximize a 3D effect, there needs to be things in the fore, middle and background.
A lot of folks also make the mistake of having the lenses more then regular eye width apart, which ruins any effect - good job for realizing this.
Gregz0r1 2 years ago
I agree with all you've said ... thanks! Now to search out the new Fuji :)
nytram1309 2 years ago
I am still a bit cross-eyed, but thats pretty cool.
YoppyKyabetsu 2 years ago
Great ... thanks for watching ... not a very exciting video but probably my best 3D filming because both cameras are identical etc ... will try one more time with cameras toed-in a little, just like our own eyes :)
nytram1309 2 years ago
I don't have a funky viewer, or the red-green glasses, but I tried the cross-eye technique and it works pretty well... although my eyes started hurting after a minute or so!! Looks pretty neat though.... 3D effect is quite pronounced.
davedupplaw 2 years ago