I love taking pictures of big tracks. There is something appealing in these
pictures, seen in 3d. It is like "being there" next to this huge truck, in
the middle of the highway.
I also like taking hyperstereo pictures of the clouds. This is very simple:
If you see a nice cloud formation to the side (not in front of you), take
one picture, wait a couple of seconds, take another picture.
The motion of the car provides the "stereo base", which is huge, considering
the speed of the car. But the distance of the clouds is also large. The
result is that if you combine these two pictures in a stereo pair, you see
depth in the clouds. It is called hyperstereo because the stereo base is
much larger than the spacing of the eyes.
To take these cloud hyperstereos you only need a 2d camera, not a 3d.
Anyone of you can take these. If not from a car, then from an airplane.
You are sitting there with a 2d camera in your hands and nice clouds outside
the window. What better way to use your time than take 3d hyperstereos of
the clouds?
A hyperstereo of clouds while driving during the National Stereoscopic
Association convention last July, got me first Place in the Fuji sponsored
3d competition for pictures taken with a Fuji 3d camera during the
convention. Even though I used a 3d camera, I used the "Advanced 3d mode"
where the camera takes one (2d) picture, waits a user-set time, then take
another (2d) picture, then combines the two pictures in a 3d picture that
you can actually see in the camera's 3d display.
My prize was $500!!! This is the first (and possibly last) time I have
actually won money for one of my pictures!!
George
-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Swale
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 7:29 AM
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [OM] Taking pictures while running
> George Themelis wrote:
>
> > I am not going to admit it here, but sometimes I take pictures while
> > driving.
I did that too, when I took the series of shots to illustrate a major trip
moving
my gear south to a new home, and also going north, to illustrate some other
aspects.
It might be possible to navigate a submarine or a tank using a periscope.
But I soon found that navigating a Rover 4x4 on a road while viewing the
road through the viewfinder of an E-3 was a tricky process, and I hadn't had
enough practice.
I decided to quit before the vehicle fell off the side of the road. :-))
Brian Swale.
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