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Anaglyph Gigapan Proof of Concept - Saline River Valley, Kansas

By:Ron Schott (rschott) on February 28, 2008
Tags: anaglyph , fofs , beta , 12x3(x2) , cropped , kansas , geology , limestone , oil

Distant cliffs of Fort Hays Limestone. Use red/blue glasses to view the anaglyph 3D effect. Created from two 12x3 Gigapan images shot about 1 foot apart. Alignment, cropping, and anaglyph shading done in Photoshop.

Date Taken: February 28, 2008
Date Added: March 4, 2008
Bookmarked: 0 times
Total Views: 2365 views
Gear: Canon S5 IS on GigaPan robotic mount
Snapshots: 3
Size: 0.12 gigapixels
Field of View: 58.0 degrees wide, 11.5 degrees high


comments
May 29, 2008 12:48 Flag as inappropriate

Fantastic 3:D

Posted by payam195r
September 28, 2008 10:39 Flag as inappropriate

Very cool! I've done anaglyphs before, but this is jacking it up a notch. You've inspired me -- I'll have to get out and try one also. Thanks.

Posted by troutfishing
November 2, 2008 10:41 Flag as inappropriate

Seriously cool. How did you do the shading in Photoshop?

Posted by tfoss
November 2, 2008 14:13 Flag as inappropriate

Once I had stitched the two GigaPans with GigaPan Stitcher and saved them as TIFs I basically followed the guidelines laid out in "Making Anaglyph Images in Adobe Photoshop" from the Southern California Earthquake Center at: http://www.scec.org/geowall/makeanaglyph.html

Posted by rschott
November 3, 2008 08:57 Flag as inappropriate

Perfect. Thanks. I'll have to try one.

Posted by tfoss
June 2, 2009 13:44 Flag as inappropriate

Have you been using two of the Epic/Epic 100 devices side by side, or one only when taking the images? Keeping the sun movement in check during the entire time, and checking the accuracy of the reference Gigapan full frame would appear to be easier with two full setups. Thanks for the view :)

Posted by danajohnson0
November 5, 2009 12:33 Flag as inappropriate

Interesting how the registration of the L/R images makes closer poles seem to stick out above the surface of the monitor. In holography we would call that an image plane hologram. Is there a similar term for anaglyphs?

Posted by neuperg