Conan Whitehouse Gallery > Unsorted > cha cha chaaa 1

Your setup needs updating.You may be missing, or have improperly installed, one or more of the required 3D Vision components. Please check the System Requirements page for more details.

file preview
file preview
Bellydancer cha cha chaaa 1 cha cha chaaa 2 poor little mini poor little mini 2 poor little mini 3 newness bikini biker bikini biker Byron Bay Byron Bay southport 1 southport 2 southport 3 southport 4 southport 5

Comments

You must be logged in to comment.

3335
views
0
favored
Posted Jan 29, 2012 by: Conan Whitehouse
Description: Just incase your eyes weren't hurting yet today here are a couple of UN-synced cha-cha, hyperstereo shots. Let me give you a rundown for those of you unfamiliar with these terms with some common problems and issues: 1. un-synced: this means there is no syncronization between cameras (in this case there is just one camera therefore it's impossible). You can still shoot un-synced stereoscopic images with two cameras by triggering both as close together in time as possible with your fingers. You need to have as little moving in your shot as possible. Troublesome for action photography or things like flags or water with wind blowing across it. The same manual settings are required on both cameras and the same focus point. 2. Cha-cha: this is using one camera to take two photographs to create a 3d image. Take one pic, move sideways left or right a few inches, take another pointed at the same area. You need a fairly static scene - water, cars, people walking, eyes blinking, birds flying will all cause problems. Cha-cha is a great way to create macro stereo images of static (in many cases dead) objects. Some of the most amazing 3d shots of static insects and small objects are done using this method using a lot of brains and some very cheap equipment. You can do cha-cha today if you have any sort of digital camera which can capture to your computer. Plug the two images into your 3d editor of choice, figure out left from right, tweak a little and view 3d. The shot above is taken using a Ricoh GRD which cost me $150 on ebay and processed in stereophotomaker. 3. Hyperstereo: stereoscopy fans love it because it creates a huge amount of depth far back into an image. Basically you have the two eyes of your cameras (or camera if cha-cha'ing) further apart than a human's eyes anywhere from a few inches to huge distances in some cases. Some problems are evident in these images include: - bottom left of curved footpath; there is too great a difference in background behind the fence, this will cause strain in your eyes, also caused by such a great distance between foreground object and background object (this is very hard to avoid in this scene without sacrificing the curve of the pathway even with very close camera distance - eg. the pain must stay ;)). - background of walkway in dam wall image; there is a great difference in position of background trees in relation to the walkway on left of image in each eye. This will also cause eye strain. The benefits of hyperstereo images are that when photographing a large object from far with no foreground objects it will enable you to obtain depth where a more human like distance between cameras will create a flatter, more realistic image. The closer your cameras and the further the distance between you and objects in your scene the less deep it will look.
Rate This Image
Your rating: none
Average: 3 (1 votes)
3D System: Nvidia 3d Vision
Stereo Camera: canon twin dslr's on either z bracket or side by side - fuji w3
Copyright © 2024. NVIDIA Corporation.
Technology is powered by Phereo