Dariush--
Although I agree with you on the sometimes need
to create darker images to provide the photographer's
intended mood, there is a major consideration
that has to be dealt with. Anaglyph viewing requires the
use
of dual-filter glasses. These filters cut
down light by as much as two f/stops that immediately
darken
any image created.
If an image is already dark to begin with, it
then gets even darker when viewed with the glasses, so dark
that
vital details can be lost, and the intended mood
goes from "gloomy" to that of being shot at night.
Therefore, if the photographer intends for
his/her stereo view to appear dark, it will have to be
lightened
first to compensate for the
glasses.
Marshall
Sent: Saturday, June 04, 2011 5:51 AM
Subject: R: [Anaglyphs] Jay/No
Feeling/Tim,LR,Brian,Imre
Some members here like photo's criteria as they
learned from some theorical books on how to make a "perfect"
photos ( a bit like a National Geographic Mag. images...) !! My
suspect is that they don't even think that any photographer has
her-his style and "finger print".. or some pictures can be so dark
or bright due to express certain feeling and atmospher or
situation! They prefer the "nice" photos in which, everything is
clearly explained and visible immediatly, instead of the "good"
personal ones!
cheers Jay,
Dariush --- Sab 4/6/11, Jucarbi
<jucarbi2005(-at-)yahoo.com> ha scritto:
Da: Jucarbi
<jucarbi2005(-at-)yahoo.com> Oggetto: [Anaglyphs] No
Feeling/Tim,LR,Brian,Imre A:
anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com Data: Sabato 4 giugno 2011,
08:06
Thanks
for responding. Imre: it was a cold, gloomy day so I
deliberately did not lighten the image.
Jay
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