Re: [Utah-astronomy] More 3D
LOL, Many of you describe just what my wife said when I tried to get her to see in 3D. She said, “My eyes have a head ache.” I had her focus on the tip of her finger about 6 – 8 inches away with the image right behind on the screen about 2 feet away and she got it, then lowered her finger. I am pretty sure it was her index finger anyway :>) I guess the wall-eye method is to just get your eyes parallel as if you had a 1000 yard stare with the images fairly close. I tried moving my head back and forth using that method and I could only get part of the image to come into view. Some people do better with that method, though. Their eyes don’t get a head ache…hehe. Jim --- On Fri, 4/17/09, Chuck Hards <chuck.hards@gmail.com> wrote: From: Chuck Hards <chuck.hards@gmail.com> Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] More 3D To: "Utah Astronomy" <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Date: Friday, April 17, 2009, 12:17 AM The "wall-eyed" method? LOL! Most people who can't do the crossed-eyes method just can't seem to make one image overlap the other with crossed-eyes. Tilting the head is often needed to establish registration. Crossing the eyes too far is another common mistake. If you can focus on an object about six or seven inches in front of your face without too much difficulty, you should be able to use the crossed-eye method. Your eyes don't cross much more than they normally do when looking at something half a foot away. On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 12:10 AM, Joe Bauman <josephmbauman@yahoo.com>wrote:
There's a method that's the opposite of the cross-eyed style, and it works too. That's the type I can manage. -- Joe
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Jim Gibson