Thanks, Bill.
This was part of a life-size "diorama" about 25 or 30 feet wide, real stuffed animals, and a painted backdrop (wall) about 6 feet behind the herd.
Reworking? Well, the part of the backdrop (grass, mountains, clouds) that remains in the image I converted from 2D to 3D. Only about half of the display appears in this stereo. The herd was extracted from the background in the rest of the image. The "Photo" that they are jumping into was constructed in Photoshop to be a compatible perspective. The Photoshop file has 20 layers and is 234 megabytes in size.
It took me about a week to decide exactly how to set up the various elements and probably about 10 hours to do the extractions and construct the image (including backing up, changing my mind, etc.).
Mike Beech
William Silverman
<wmagman(-at-)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Mike,
What was the set-up like in the museum? Did you have to do a lot of reworking of the elements in this composition? I like the results very much.
Bill Silverman
On 9/18/07, Mike Beech <beech1943(-at-)yahoo.com> wrote:
Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
Nikon D200, slide-bar, Photoshop CS3.
Mike Beech
Boardwalk for $500? In 2007? Ha!
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