Take a look around town with your 3-D glasses
If you like what you see, please consider voting for me on October 6 and donating to my campaign. Scroll down to see how 3D anaglyphs work, how to make your own glasses, and where to find additional images. Expand your browser to full screen and click on an image to change to “lightbox” mode and make the images larger. The Red lens goes over the left eye, and the Blue lens goes over the right eye.
Pipeline
Lathrop High School
West Valley High School
5th Avenue Park
Hutchison Institute of Technology
North Pole High School
Carlson Center
Ryan Middle School
Growden Field
Randy Smith Middle School
Pioneer Park
Tanana Middle School
Ladd Elementary School
Ann Wein Elementary School
North Pole Middle School
How it works:
Your eyes are separated by about 3 inches. If you hold your arm out in front of you with your thumb up, and close one eye and then the other, you will see your thumb shift relative to the distant background. Your brain can process this to give you depth perception and it can recognize those shifts out to about 20 feet. A 3D anaglyph works by taking two photos from two different positions, effectively looking at the scene with your eyeballs separated by that amount. By assigning one image to the left eye and the other to the right eye with a color filter (the red-blue glasses) you create the 3D view.
How to make your own glasses
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More 3D anaglyph images
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