3D glasses + CMYK
- Started
- Last post
- 6 Responses
- mr_clean
Anyone know what CMYK values to use to simulate 3D with glasses? I'd be applying it to graphics only, not photographs.
- PonyBoy0
hmmm...
... red and blue?
:D
- Nairn0
http://www.google.com/search?hl=…
Yielded..
http://www.colorstereo.com/anagl…
(For all anaglyphs on the Color Stereo site, and most anaglyphs you encounter, the red lens should be on the left. The Red-Cyan combination is recommended for the Color Stereo anaglyphs.There are three different colors that usually go on the right: Blue, Cyan, or Green.
Green is best used for monochrome anaglyphs. I got mine at a black & white 3D horror film over 30 years ago.
Blue does the best job of removing the color ghosting innate with anaglyphs, but has the downside of darker images and washed out colors..
Cyan is good for removing all but the most severe ghosting while leaving a brighter and more color saturated image than blue.With cardboard frames, the stems can be bent back to reverse which color is on either side. This will usually reverse the direction of depth.)
..in 5.6 seconds
- anayafx0
theoretically, if you could build custom glasses with your own color gels.... you could make it work with any hue you wanted to...
one thing that always bothered me about the red and blue is that duotone effect you get...
I wonder if your split the visible color range between the 2 sides.... maybe greens on the left eye, and the other channels on the right...
so your image would have two layers split, one without the green color channel, and the other off to the side with all the colors except the green channel....
The question is, would your brain reconstruct it correctly and give you the correct balance of color??
- wwfc0
...are you working with photoshop? Can you not just take the graphic that you want to make into an anaglyph - convert it to rgb - select the channels and the move the channel layers to get the desired offset - then convert it back to cmyk?
...that's what I would do.
- fooler0
I pitched an entire ad campaign to a major video rental chain that used 3-d POP and 3-D glasses. It made it all the way to the top suites before they pushed back thinking they didn't rent 50's 3-D movies.
It was pretty slick,even though it got shot down. I still use it in my portfolio.
I just did some basic googling and found if you take a RGB image and shift the B a few clicks right and the R a few clicks left and get some glasses it works fine.
- wwfc0
...yep that's the fella - correct term for this sort of image is "anaglyph"
http://www.google.com/search?hl=…
I had a project that I wanted to use anaglyphic images for.
Found quite a few good points of resource.
http://www.pinsharp3d.co.uk/
are specialists in the field
;-)good luck and let us see the finished article