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Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer

Started Nov 10, 2020 | Questions
J Peters Contributing Member • Posts: 759
Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer
1

Hi,

I am new to the 3D forum. I developed an interest in 3D a year or two back and bought a book about it. I gave up because I was struggling to find a suitable viewer.

I bought two pairs of the red/cyan glasses from different sellers online. Both were at least cheap, but neither worked properly. I have since found out there appear to be different standards for the colours used in those types of 3D image, so not all glasses work with all pictures.

I've also looked for the stereoscope style of viewer online but these either tend to be Victorian museum pieces (expensive, and sold as a collector's item more than intended for actual use), or modern flimsy plastic rubbish that look like they would fall apart.

There are some 3D books on the market that come with a stereoscopic viewer  - but again they look like cheap plastic, and I'm paying quite a lot just for the book.

Any ideas please?

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threed123
threed123 Senior Member • Posts: 1,490
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer
1

This website has a lot of glasses, etc. I've bought from them and they are okay. The one problem with this website is that it's been around for a long time and it uses old tech and is not secure, so your anti-virus software might flag it.

http://www.3dstereo.com/

BillAngel Regular Member • Posts: 200
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer
1

I display all of the stereoscopic images that I create in "parallel view side-by-side"  format.

I've been quite satisfied using the following viewer that can be purchased via Amazon:

Stereo Wide-View Viewer for Prints and Monitors
by 3Dstereo
Learn more: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07DQT8QD6/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_oXYQFbZDV1ZX7

 BillAngel's gear list:BillAngel's gear list
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OP J Peters Contributing Member • Posts: 759
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer

Lots to peruse there, thank you both for replying.

Artak Hambarian
Artak Hambarian Junior Member • Posts: 40
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer

J Peters wrote:

Hi,

I am new to the 3D forum. I developed an interest in 3D a year or two back and bought a book about it. I gave up because I was struggling to find a suitable viewer.

I bought two pairs of the red/cyan glasses from different sellers online. Both were at least cheap, but neither worked properly. I have since found out there appear to be different standards for the colours used in those types of 3D image, so not all glasses work with all pictures.

I've also looked for the stereoscope style of viewer online but these either tend to be Victorian museum pieces (expensive, and sold as a collector's item more than intended for actual use), or modern flimsy plastic rubbish that look like they would fall apart.

There are some 3D books on the market that come with a stereoscopic viewer - but again they look like cheap plastic, and I'm paying quite a lot just for the book.

Any ideas please?

Hi J Peters!

You may want to explore http://www.cyclopital3d.com/View-Vaster.html. However, I have built my viewer myself, to work with Sony Xperia Z5, one of rare Sony only smartphones, that has a 4K screen, available at a relatively low price on EBay.

In general, viewers are a problem - no manufacturer takes the risk to enter this, as I assume they think, small market, although technology is readily here.

You can also use head mount devices, such as VR headsets, but all of them, to my knowledge (also based on my Samsung Gear VR Oculus) have such a short-focus ocular lenses - to provide wide viewing angle - that due to their high magnification, even 4K smartphone screen pixels are visible in an ugly way. But the 3D effect is very immersive...

Hope this helps.

-- hide signature --

Dr. Artak Hambarian,
College of Engineering
American University of Armenia (AUA)

 Artak Hambarian's gear list:Artak Hambarian's gear list
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tony brown Veteran Member • Posts: 4,387
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer
1

You have not mentioned X-Eyed stereo pictures in which the right hand picture is put on the left of a pair and the left hand picture on the right. Just the same as Side by Side but crossed over. Like this pair:-

I find it helps to view the pair as below, so that the right eye can't see the right hand image, nor the left ditto - just look through the gap between your hands which should be about 2 - 3 inches:-

The eyes then see a virtual picture, in the middle, in full 3D, full colour and with no apparatus needed at all. Try it with the top picture pair. The two matching parts of the pictures should not be too far apart - say no more than the length of a ball point pen on a computer screen or you would need to be further away from the screen.

It doesn't do it for some people, for others it works fine and is completely 'portable' and takes no more display space than Side by Side pairs.

Took me a while as I progressed through B&W Anaglyphs with Red/Cyan specs, color Anaglyphs with DuBois correction, ColorCode3D with Amber/Blue specs, Side by Side with assorted viewers and finally, X-Eyed viewing. Most work was made with the Cha-Cha technique using standard, single lens cameras, but I do occasionally use a Fujifilm Real3D W3 camera for video.

-- hide signature --

Cheers, Tony.

Turbguy1
MOD Turbguy1 Senior Member • Posts: 1,467
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer

For standard Holmes-style (antique) views, this works well.

https://shop.londonstereo.com/OWL-B-ENV.html

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Brian F Flint
Brian F Flint Regular Member • Posts: 184
Re: Getting Hold of a Suitable Viewer

A suitable viewer which I used for some time is a hand held viewer and a smart phone ( Sony Xperia Z5 premium with 4K display ) On the smartphone I would load side by side parallel images and movie clips which I created from stereo photos/clips. The Viewer is held about 4 inches from the screen on the smart phone. I found this gave very good results.

https://shop.londonstereo.com/LITE.html

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