Guess Watch Blue Face
Posted by admin on Thursday, September 2, 2010 · Leave a Comment
Guess Watch Blue Face

How to make movies in 3D without glasses with red and blue?
My recent trip to Walt Disney World and Universal Islands of Adventure films brought 3D to my attention. All the attractions of the same technologies used to produce 3D effects. What really puzzles me is that they give you your glasses are not red and blue, are kind of sunglasses as (Y are non-electronic), so how do you send each image to the right eye? One thing we noticed with the glasses is that when I looked at the clock with a specific target (left I think) my LCD watch face was completely black. However, with the other eye I could see my view very well. I guess use some kind of light that filters in the lenses that filter frames that are not supposed to be seen with that eye. Another thing I noticed is that when you take the glasses off the screen is really precarious. The more things get into more separate 3D images on the screen are, but I guess the method is used in old movies blue and red, too?
Must wear glasses are polarized. Polarization blocks light waves from certain angles, depending on how the polarized material is broken. Some polarized sunglasses are expensive to block the suns rays of light almost parallel, and are commonly used in fisheries because fish can see better when the sun's glare is reduced. I'm not 100% sure but I think polarized lenses by reducing the microscopic ridges on the glass or plastic. In the case of the 3D film, shot horizontal ridges in one eye and vertical in the other eye. Then each frame of the polarizing film other differently, so you see some of them with one eye and half with the other, simulating stereoscopic vision. Some cool effects can be achieved with polarized lenses, like if you take two lenses polarized sunglasses and rotate them while looking through them both, the light appear and disappear.