A rose in any other format would be as sweet but ... *** #INSTAGRAMSTEREOSCOPIC Instagram is a great place to share photos instantly. But some of us have been wondering how to make #3D photos effective in a very restrictive format - a small square. Instagram stereos viewed on a mobile phone can't be zoomed in upon, neither does turning the phone on its side work to enlarge the stereo to normal size. If you fit a normal side by side stereo pair - or, worse, a whole stereo card - into the small Instagram square you get a very small 3-D picture! If you zoom it in during the initial 'fitting' process in Instagram, so it fills the square vertically, you just trim off the outsides of the pictures and the thing becomes impossible to view. There's no doubt that the best use of the small square is to spilt it into two halves and put two tall thin pictures side by side. That's OK if you have some way of working on the pictures off-line in Photoshop or whatever. But it's time-consuming and after a while gets annoying. and the whole fun of Instagram is that it's supposed to be in instant. There ought to be some way of getting from an app like 3D Camera straight into a suitable format on Instagram. @ well, I discovered that there is a way. You can trick the 3-D camera app into producing those long thin pictures that you need for Instagram. It's probably worth saying that these pictures are not much use for any other use! What I've done here is take the first picture with the subject slightly to the right of the picture, and then moved over to the right a few mm, but kept the camera parallel. By not toeing in, and not keeping the subject in the centre of the field, you get two pictures which cover different areas laterally. Lining up the pictures one on top of the other in the '+' configuration in 3-D Camera, I slid the movable (right) image a few mm to the right of the synch position, as usual, so the subject would end up just behind the stereo window. Then I hit the side-by-side icon. Job done ! The app thinks it must trim off the outside edges of the two images, or it will run out of common image space. So it gives us the long thin pair of pics we need. #londonstereo

brianmayforrealさん(@brianmayforreal)が投稿した動画 -

ブライアン・メイのインスタグラム(brianmayforreal) - 8月26日 04時17分


A rose in any other format would be as sweet but ... *** #INSTAGRAMSTEREOSCOPIC

Instagram is a great place to share photos instantly. But some of us have been wondering how to make #3D photos effective in a very restrictive format - a small square. Instagram stereos viewed on a mobile phone can't be zoomed in upon, neither does turning the phone on its side work to enlarge the stereo to normal size. If you fit a normal side by side stereo pair - or, worse, a whole stereo card - into the small Instagram square you get a very small 3-D picture! If you zoom it in during the initial 'fitting' process in Instagram, so it fills the square vertically, you just trim off the outsides of the pictures and the thing becomes impossible to view.
There's no doubt that the best use of the small square is to spilt it into two halves and put two tall thin pictures side by side. That's OK if you have some way of working on the pictures off-line in Photoshop or whatever. But it's time-consuming and after a while gets annoying.

and the whole fun of Instagram is that it's supposed to be in instant. There ought to be some way of getting from an app like 3D Camera straight into a suitable format on Instagram.
@ well, I discovered that there is a way. You can trick the 3-D camera app into producing those long thin pictures that you need for Instagram. It's probably worth saying that these pictures are not much use for any other use!

What I've done here is take the first picture with the subject slightly to the right of the picture, and then moved over to the right a few mm, but kept the camera parallel. By not toeing in, and not keeping the subject in the centre of the field, you get two pictures which cover different areas laterally. Lining up the pictures one on top of the other in the '+' configuration in 3-D Camera, I slid the movable (right) image a few mm to the right of the synch position, as usual, so the subject would end up just behind the stereo window. Then I hit the side-by-side icon. Job done ! The app thinks it must trim off the outside edges of the two images, or it will run out of common image space. So it gives us the long thin pair of pics we need. #londonstereo


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