3D - Mercury II Camera.
You will need a pair of anaglyph glasses to view in 3D. (red & cyan Lenses.)
Photo Credit: Brett Sayles.
3D conversion by Gaylord (SoHillGuy.)
Even in 2D --
I really like the camera!
SoHillGuy wrote:
You will need a pair of anaglyph glasses to view in 3D. (red & cyan Lenses.)
Photo Credit: Brett Sayles.
3D conversion by Gaylord (SoHillGuy.)
Dear SoHillGuy... I am dying to know how you shot the image of the old camera without casting a shadow on the table top. (a)did you edit out the fishing line from above or the shadow of the fishing line on the table or both? (2) Did you put your camera shutter on "auto" and bump the bottom of the table to send the old camera up in the air without any support? (3) Did you support the camera with a suction cup from behind the camera where it did not show in the image and edit out the shadow of the support? Thank you for sharing the secret in advance. Shooter41
ken_stern wrote:
Even in 2D --
I really like the camera!
***
It is an interesting style of camera for it day.
Shooter41 wrote:
Dear SoHillGuy... I am dying to know how you shot the image of the old camera without casting a shadow on the table top. (a)did you edit out the fishing line from above or the shadow of the fishing line on the table or both? (2) Did you put your camera shutter on "auto" and bump the bottom of the table to send the old camera up in the air without any support? (3) Did you support the camera with a suction cup from behind the camera where it did not show in the image and edit out the shadow of the support? Thank you for sharing the secret in advance. Shooter41
Dear SoHillGuy... I am dying to know how you shot ... (
show quote)
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I was not the photographer. I only converted the picture into a 3D. Thank you for viewing and being inquisitive.
Love the shot and 3D effect.
Flying Three wrote:
Love the shot and 3D effect.
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Thank you for the comment.
Unique even in it's time frame. Gone but not forgotten. I feel like I have one in a drawer round here somewhere.
Don, the 2nd son wrote:
Unique even in it's time frame. Gone but not forgotten. I feel like I have one in a drawer round here somewhere.
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I was not familiar with the Mercury camera so I looked it up on the Web. The information I saw said it only uses a half-frame of the 35mm film giving it an 18mm x 24mm section which gives it a vertical orientation.
SoHillGuy wrote:
You will need a pair of anaglyph glasses to view in 3D. (red & cyan Lenses.)
Photo Credit: Brett Sayles.
3D conversion by Gaylord (SoHillGuy.)
The effect works! Thanx for sharing!
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