This is a finished…fork off of an unfinished head model.
Used my patented parent-the-camera-to-an-empty-and-rotate-the-empty-and-composite-them-in-the-gimp ™ technoligy.
- Sharp
This is a finished…fork off of an unfinished head model.
Used my patented parent-the-camera-to-an-empty-and-rotate-the-empty-and-composite-them-in-the-gimp ™ technoligy.
Question, a bit offtopic. Can those glasses be bought in stores? You see, I need a whole bunch of em for a school project.
And as I don’t have one yet, I can’t comment on your picture
question… how you did the red and blue calculation for 3d glass? or there is an esay trick to do so?
That looks very cool, but the text doesn’t look quite right with glasses on.
http://www.stereoscopy.com/reel3d/anaglyph-glasses.html
It was done in the gimp. I opened up both images, set the background color to black, and for the left eye image, selected the green and blue channels and cleared (ctrl-k). For the right eye image, I cleared the red channel. I copied the right eye image onto the left one, and in the layers box, I selected addition.
Yes… Gimp… a “Linux thing”… but you can get it for windows too.
hehe, nice .
but to see it correctly with your 3d glasses you need to render the writings seperately, or just do an ortho rendering. but it looks kinda crappy with ortho on :-? .
cu nastacc
hmm. at first the text looked really weird so i took it into the gimp and did a little smoothing on it, and now it looks fine for me.
why is it that when ever i find art that requires 3d glasses i can never find mine
does it work with both the red and green, and the red and blue ones?
i assume it does, because youve used both the green and blue channel together.