Made this on my laptop, so I was able to finagle it to be a bit cleaner, I think… I’m not sure because cross-view doesn’t come naturally to me! Let me know how it looks.
Edit: I might have made it worse… I can’t tell. 🧐
Nope, you nailed it! This is absolutely stunning, especially for free-hand!
When I’ve done stereoscopic images without an adapter or cutting and moving layers in my favorite photo editor, I’ve mounted my camera sideways on a rack focus rig and then slid it side to side.
The only minor problem is the images are slightly misaligned. The right image is a bit lower than the left.
I made a quick diagram to remember which way cross view is. Imagine floating above two tall buildings. Each building will show the perspective for cross view images:
This one is cross-view and the other was parallel view, but otherwise I did attempt to align the images on this one a little better, but there’s a chance I made it worse, heh. 😅
Try tilting your head slightly and see if that works. Otherwise, if the original one worked for you, this one might be inverted, and the closest apple might look further away. That’s how I see it.
IPD = inter pupillary distance. So the distance between the left picture and right picture. Generally try to keep this about 2 - 2.25 inchs. Though there are reasons to have it be difference.
A few other terms that can be useful.
Cha Cha: what you did. Using a single camera to take the two pictures one after the other.
Tow in: change the angel of each shot to converge on the subject. similar to how the eyes do in humans.
Parallel shot: both shots have the same camera orientation just different positions. (Imo the better method. It prevents camara distortion miss match.
Can you post a cross view version?
Made this on my laptop, so I was able to finagle it to be a bit cleaner, I think… I’m not sure because cross-view doesn’t come naturally to me! Let me know how it looks.
Edit: I might have made it worse… I can’t tell. 🧐
Nope, you nailed it! This is absolutely stunning, especially for free-hand!
When I’ve done stereoscopic images without an adapter or cutting and moving layers in my favorite photo editor, I’ve mounted my camera sideways on a rack focus rig and then slid it side to side.
Good work
That’s a cross view! 😊
The only minor problem is the images are slightly misaligned. The right image is a bit lower than the left.
I made a quick diagram to remember which way cross view is. Imagine floating above two tall buildings. Each building will show the perspective for cross view images:
That is helpful, thank you!
And yes, I think I misaligned them when I was trying to align them… I’ll figure it out eventually.
what is the difference? The other one snapped nicely for me when i met my eyes drift apart a little but i can’t get this one to work
This one is cross-view and the other was parallel view, but otherwise I did attempt to align the images on this one a little better, but there’s a chance I made it worse, heh. 😅
Try tilting your head slightly and see if that works. Otherwise, if the original one worked for you, this one might be inverted, and the closest apple might look further away. That’s how I see it.
Much better. What was ipd? It looks more than 2.5". Did you shot parallel or tow in?
I’m afraid I don’t know what any of that means!! I free handed this with a single camera, I’d that helps answer any of your questions!
IPD = inter pupillary distance. So the distance between the left picture and right picture. Generally try to keep this about 2 - 2.25 inchs. Though there are reasons to have it be difference.
A few other terms that can be useful.
Cha Cha: what you did. Using a single camera to take the two pictures one after the other.
Tow in: change the angel of each shot to converge on the subject. similar to how the eyes do in humans.
Parallel shot: both shots have the same camera orientation just different positions. (Imo the better method. It prevents camara distortion miss match.
Either way it’s a fun picture.
Thanks for sharing the terminology! I believe I “towed in” on this particular image. I’ll have to try the parallel shot method next time.