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No, you are thinking about it the wrong way. If the photos are taken too far away then it would be difficult to make a 3D image from two photos taken with a short distance from each other, because the angle from the two points of view to the target would be too similar for the 3D effect to work.
Originally posted by arianna
You all seem to be missing the point as to why this type of 3-D view can be realized. The viewpoint to surface is a large distance so it does not matter so much with regard to having two seperate images. A single image will suffice to produce the left and right views.
Yes.
Anyway, have any of you keen commentators viewed the large anaglyph.
Not necessarily, we (humans) went to the Moon and we could cope with the almost non-existing lunar atmosphere.
They are on the surface so it had to be a race of beings that could cope with the lunar atmosphere.
OK, lets do the same thing with some text.
ArMaP keeps going on about the enhancement process I use 'destroys' data. So it may, but what I am more concerned about is the end result which in this case shows that the boulder trails are not trails at all but a carefully laid out set of structures.
I don't know if you see what you are saying; if the detail in the original image gives the viewers the impression that the dashed lines are boulder trails, what you have been doing all these days is trying to destroy the original image to avoid that impression. Looking at it this way, it looks like you are trying to find something that isn't there, like the man on the stairs in the little poem from which I got the above snippet.
It is only the detail in the original image that tends to give viewers the impression that the 'dashed' lines are boulder trails.
Originally posted by arianna
Yes, two cameras are ised for close to medium distance 3-D photographic work. There are two things to consider about the above 3-D image namely, the horizontal offset and the way the brain perceives the information received from each eye.
Bearing in mind the distance the viewpoint is above the surface in the above image, consider a flat open scene and in the far distance is a tall slim object. The width of the distant view is say 600 yards. Would shifting the camera horizontally three to four inches to capture another shot of the distant object make any difference when viewing both images of the object?
Originally posted by ArMaP
2 - if you can make a 3D image from just one photo, can you make one from the photo below?
Originally posted by wmd_2008
Right arianna lets kill this mounds myth stone dead!
No, it's a crater.
Originally posted by arianna
The artefact showing in your image gives the appearance of being a mound - but is it a mound?
Originally posted by wmd_2008
reply to post by arianna
YOU really need help if you think those trails are mounds.
There's something wrong here, I have not said that the features are mounds or craters.
Originally posted by arianna
Originally posted by wmd_2008
reply to post by arianna
YOU really need help if you think those trails are mounds.
There's something wrong here, I have not said that the features are mounds or craters.
Originally posted by arianna
The artefact showing in your image gives the appearance of being a mound - but is it a mound?
Originally posted by loves a conspiricy
reply to post by arianna
I really dont see what you are looking at in any of the pics.
Just look like rock formations to me.
Originally posted by arianna
Sorry for creating that impression.
Maybe I should have written that to some people the feature may appear to be a mound or a crater.
Your version looks "flat", with no signs of real depth, like in the shadow on the wall, it looks like the shadow is at the same distance as the farther part of the shelves.
Originally posted by arianna
ArMaP, as I said before not really an ideal view but I think my version is a better visualization of the 3-D effect.
Do you mean a pair of photos showing the same view but with the verticals really vertical?
If possible, can you post two images of the same view taken approx. 3 inches apart but make sure to the camera is 'square' and the verticals in both images will be upright and not on the skew as shown in your pair of images. I will produce a 3-D image from the pair of images you post.