You'll need a pair of colored filter 3-D glasses to view these pictures. These pictures were designed to be viewed with the RED lens over the LEFT EYE, and the BLUE lens over the RIGHT EYE. It also helps to have a monitor that has thousands of colors, but the effect will work okay in just 256.

If you wear glasses to read, put the 3-D glasses in front of your regular glasses and be about two feet away from the screen. Sometimes, at least with me, it takes a few seconds for my eyes to adjust and then suddenly the steroscopic illusion takes over.

This modest begining is just that, a start of something that I hope will be fun and entertaining. Let me know if you have any suggestions and remember to check here to see the latest in Web 3-D!

If you're curious about how to make these images yourself, Click Here.


In this picture, the brick wall should appear to lie right on your computer screen while the parking meters are floating in front of it. The poster on the wall opens like a window into your computer screen.


This photograph of a path lined with pines was taken with a digital camera and then enhanced in Photoshop. All of the depth is in back of the computer screen except for a few leaves, which actually come towards you. In this picture, you can almost see some of the color that is often lost in 3-D pictures.


This was taken on Viewzone's Expedition '98 at Monument Valley.


 

Other Cool 3-D Links!

These pictures are linked from other sites. They show what can be done with some old fashioned stereoscopic camera as well as computerized images. Enjoy!

One last one - just arrived from Hans Lipsik, Slovenia.
Stand back from this one! (Thanks Hans.)


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