Stereo photography is the process of taking two photographs from
slightly different angles. When the two images are presented so that one eye sees one image and
the other eye sees the other image, we see the scene as having 'depth' and objects as being
three dimensional. The original stereo photographs were viewed with a special viewer though some
people can see in 3D if they view the two images cross-eyed. Indeed some people can see the
model skull, opposite, in 3D in that way.
Thus Stereo Photography is simply a way of presenting images so that the brain has an
impression of 3D. In the same way, the Scanetica 3D Scanner can process the images and,
using the same principles as our own vision, work out the distance to each part of a model
and so construct a 3D model of the subject.
However not just any two images are useful. They must be matched images taken from very slightly
different directions. The instructions provided on this website will allow you to take
suitable photographs using one or two cameras.
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