All posts by 3DM

My first 3D wiggle animated GIFs

Alaskan Malamute
Alaskan Malamute (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Both photos taken using a Lumix GH-2 and the 3D lens, which creates a MPO file. The MPO file was then processed in Stereomaker and resized to 400 pixels wide and saved as an animated GIF “3D wiggle” image.

Tip – It seems that to upload animated GIFs to Google+, you need to be about 400 pixels or smaller. If the image is larger, Google+ converts it to a non-animated PNG file.

Update: the “wiggle” image does not appear in Chrome on one my computers, but works on another. However, when I click on the image, Chrome shows the “Wiggle” 3D image correctly. If the images below appear stationary, then try clicking on the image.

This is Sable, our Alaskan Malamute (best dogs in the world!!!!!)

 

This is Mocha, our Siberian Husky and retired sled team dog (most fun dogs in the world!!!!)

 

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3D Photography Tips (3D Porch) – this is great info!

3D Photography Tips (3D Porch).

Something I noticed is that “wiggle” shots are also done differently than regular stereoscopic shots. For example, the 3rd page of 3Dporch’s tips illustrates this where the foreground is made to move while the background is held constant.

Normally, when shooting 3D we like to have the closer subjects centered at the viewing plane (in the Z-axis) which is very different than how 3D works in a “wiggle” shot.

And note how in this wiggle 3D image, framing the photo works well, while many 3D enthusiasts would call this a “frame violation”.

When “megapixels” does not mean what you might think it means

If your camera has 48 megapixels, how many picture elements do you think your highest resolution photo has?

This specification table for a Sigma camera helps to understand a bit about how “megapixels” may or may not mean what you think it means.

From the table, this is a 48 megapixel camera (which is an amazing camera).

But down below, you can see that the highest resolution images are 4704 x 3136 picture elements wide x tall. Multiply those together and you get 14.76 megapixels, not 48 megapixels. Why?

Because megapixels is counting the sensors of which there are 3 at each pixel. Multiply 14.76 x 3 and you’ll come up with 44.2 million image sensor locations (which is close enough since the entire sensor surface is not used in most cameras). The Foveon sensor uniquely has all 3 sensor sites, per pixel stacked on top of one another.

There’s nothing wrong with these numbers – only a potential misunderstanding of what the term “megapixels” actually means.

SIGMA DP2 Merrill : Major Specifications
Image Sensor
Foveon X3® direct image sensor (CMOS)
Image Size
23.5×15.7mm
Number of Pixels
Total Pixels: 48MP
Effective Pixels: 46MP(4,800×3,200×3)
Aspect Ratio
3:2
Focal Length
30mm
35mm Equivalent Focal Format
Approx. 45mm
Maximum Aperture
F2.8
Number of Diaphragm Blades 9
9 Blades
Lens Construction
8 Elements in 6 Groups
Minimum Focusing Distance
28cm
Maximum Magnification Shooting
1:7.6
Storage Media
SD Card / Compatible with SDHC, Multi Media Card
Recording Mode
Lossless compression RAW data (12-bit, High, Medium, Low), JPEG (High, Medium, Low), RAW+JPEG, Movie (motion jpeg), Voice memo to still images (10sec.)
File Size / Still
RAW
High
4,704×3,136×3 (Approx. 45MB)
Medium
3,264×2,176×3 (Approx. 24MB)
Low
2,336×1,568×3 (Approx. 12MB
JPEG
High
Fine 4,704×3,136 (Approx. 10MB)
High Normal 4,704×3,136 (Approx. 5.6MB)
Basic 4,704×3,136 (Approx. 4.2MB)
Medium
Fine 3,264×2,176 (Approx. 5MB)
Medium Normal 3,264×2,176 (Approx. 2.7MB)
Basic 3,264×2,176 (Approx. 2MB)
Low
Fine 2,336×1,568 (Approx. 2.5MB)
Normal 2,336×1,568 (Approx. 1.4MB)
Basic 2,336×1,568 (Approx. 1MB)

Let’s take a look at another camera, the Canon 5D Mark II.

Type
High-sensitivity, high-resolution, large single-plate CMOS sensor

Pixels
Effective pixels: Approx. 21.1 megapixels

Total Pixels
Total pixels: Approx. 22.0 megapixels

And then look at the image sizes

File Size
(1) Large/Fine: Approx. 6.1MB (5616 x 3744 pixels)

(2) Large/Nomal: Approx. 3.0MB (5616 x 3744 pixels)

(3) Medium/Fine: Approx. 3.6MB (4080 x 2720 pixels)

(4) Medium/Normal: Approx. 1.9MB (4080 x 2720 pixels)

(5) Small/Fine: Approx. 2.1MB (2784 x 1856 pixels)

(6) Small/Normal: Approx. 1.0MB (2784 x 1856 pixels)

(7) RAW: Approx. 25.8MB (5616 x 3744 pixels)

(8) sRAW 1: Approx. 14.8MB (3861 x 2574 pixels)

(9) sRAW 2: Approx. 10.8MB (2784 x 1856 pixels)

With the Canon 5D Mark II, the image resolution of 5616 x 3744 is 21 megapixels, yet the camera likely has more “photosites” within the imager.

This leads to the conclusion that megapixel camera ratings do not necessarily  mean what you think they mean. And that the megapixel count may not be nearly as important as some think it is. Ultimately, lens quality, use of a tripod, sensor noise characteristics and noise removal algorithms, sharpening algorithms and general photographic skill may  be much more important in image resolution than the megapixel count – however it may be defined.

 

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