I'm curious about the new 2D to 3D Converter. The page for it says something about making side-by-side or top-bottom frames and has examples of both.
A long time ago, I found I could make my own 3D pictures by taking pictures of a scene from slightly different viewpoints (like taking pictures of the same scene without moving your head, once while looking through the viewfinder with the your right eye and once while looking through it with your left) then set the resulting two pictures side-by-side and then crossing your eyes to combine the images.
The examples shown are not 3D. I've examined the examples, and the images in the side-by-side and top-bottom are identical. If the images are identical, you cannot obtain a 3D effect. Each image must be taken from a slightly different viewpoint to obtain a 3D effect. Does the software create the differing viewpoints dynamically from the information available in adjacent video frames? I've often wondered if that could be done.
How does it work?
A long time ago, I found I could make my own 3D pictures by taking pictures of a scene from slightly different viewpoints (like taking pictures of the same scene without moving your head, once while looking through the viewfinder with the your right eye and once while looking through it with your left) then set the resulting two pictures side-by-side and then crossing your eyes to combine the images.
The examples shown are not 3D. I've examined the examples, and the images in the side-by-side and top-bottom are identical. If the images are identical, you cannot obtain a 3D effect. Each image must be taken from a slightly different viewpoint to obtain a 3D effect. Does the software create the differing viewpoints dynamically from the information available in adjacent video frames? I've often wondered if that could be done.
How does it work?
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