Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Did you know that if there is a polarization change every frame and the viewer is wearing polarizing glasses, you see the scene in 3D either via subject or camera motion?
PE
PE
And an afterthought: When you watch animation you might be seeing the same image at least four times because they (we) often shoot 'doubles'. Two frames of the same image, because 12 fps is just good enough for perception of motion.
Best,
Helen
Actually Helen I doubt many people have ever looked through an Arri or other camera wth a rotating-mirror VFEver wondered why everything looks flickery in the viewfinder, but never when you watch the film?
Doug Trumbull's method is called Showscan and it looks pretty, I did some work with them 20 yrs ago (ouch). I still think thir biggest lack is interesting content. They have a website but the newest 'news' is a couple of years old -- seems like a slow burn at best these days.PhotoEngineer said:...ultra high speed projection...
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