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- HOW STEREOP-JR WORKS
-
- Close your right eye and hold your hand up in front of your face, about a
- foot from your eyes. If you didn't know it was your hand, it would be hard
- to tell if it was just a normal hand one foot away, or a giant hand five
- feet away.
-
- Open your right eye. Now it's easy to tell how far away your hand is.
- Notice how you can see things behind the hand with one eye that you can't
- see with the other eye. Each of your eyes is sending a slightly different
- picture to your brain. Then your brain puts the information together and
- makes a complete 3-D picture of what you see.
-
- Stereop-Jr does the same thing in a different way. It makes two pictures
- of the same scene, one red, the other blue. Then it blends them together.
- When you put on the 3-D glasses and look at the picture, the left lens
- turns the blue parts of the picture black, so you see only the red parts
- with your left eye. The right lens turns the red parts black, so you see
- only the blue parts with your right eye. Then your brain puts the two
- pictures back together and makes a 3-D picture.
-
-
- Stereop-Jr converts three 8-colour flat pictures into one 32-colour
- stereoscopic picture. Five colours (including the black background colour)
- of the 8-colour picture and 25 colours of the 32-colour picture are actually
- used. When you look at the stereoscopic picture through the glasses, you'll
- see up to five shades of grey.
-
- Each flat picture becomes a "ground" of the finished picture. Three grounds
- are used: the background, the middleground and the foreground. Each ground
- must be "split" and then "overlaid". Splitting means splitting a ground
- into its red and blue (right and left) parts. Overlaying means blending a
- split ground with the grounds behind it.
-