If a tutorial on how to make 3D GIFs from your negatives is what you’re looking for, you are better served seeking out the fine articles already on the web or on YouTube. I may give it another try should I be bored or looking for something different one weekend! Ok maybe in all fairness, it’s not all that hard if you are Photoshop savvy and have a lot of time on your hands. In 2004 or 2005, as a younger man who enjoyed Photoshopping all my photos, I would’ve been all over this! But in 2019, as a family man, I neither have the time nor the inclination to do it. Making the GIF files from these cameras require some savvy Photoshop skills. I did process the image with a retro VHS effect and added some music to give it that extra funk □ This was from last year and looking back now, I’m not even sure how I did it! I don’t think I remember all the steps needed in Photoshop and when I think of putting in that work for just a few seconds of fun, well, I’m glad I did it once or twice and I’m glad I bought this camera basically for my collection! Just to show how a 3D image can transform an everyday picture into something different □ ![]() That would take a whole other article! Plus while I have done a few 3D photos, I still do not feel that I am all that proficient at it.īelow is a quick shot I did with the Nishika N8000, Kodak Gold 200, and flash. I just wanted to note that this article is NOT about how to make 3D photos using these two cameras. The results are usually the same: initial excitement which then fades quickly into oblivion. ![]() This has happened not only in photography but in the movies as well. Yet every few years, now maybe every decade or so, someone, somebody, some company attempts to reignite the 3D flame by reintroducing it to the public. ![]() That sounds so amazingly awesome you would think that 3D photography would have caught on having been around since 1839 but it hasn’t. And it is! The first documented stereoscopic “3D” photo can be traced as far back as 1839.ģD photography, in its best intentions, blends two or more photos together in an attempt to emulate the way we see dimensions in the real world, giving the viewer a sense or illusion of depth and movement. Today, in a world of virtual reality, it can be argued that 3D or stereoscopic photography is a thing of the past.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |