Hi
Today is my favorite fluorescence as usual
without barrier filter
with a barrier filter
greetings
Butterfly in fluorescence
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
Wonderful shots
I have never been able to resolve stereo pairs,
Today "I have cracked my duck" so to speak, the first time ever and i can resolve the image, wonderful.
Question for any one really? Why does my stereo image seem to move?.
I have never been able to resolve stereo pairs,
Today "I have cracked my duck" so to speak, the first time ever and i can resolve the image, wonderful.
Question for any one really? Why does my stereo image seem to move?.
used to do astronomy.
and photography.
Zeiss Universal Phase contrast.
Zeiss PMII
B&L stereo zoom.
and photography.
Zeiss Universal Phase contrast.
Zeiss PMII
B&L stereo zoom.
- rjlittlefield
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Excellent! That's always very good news to hear.grgh wrote:Today "I have cracked my duck" so to speak, the first time ever and i can resolve the image, wonderful.
Are you viewing it cross-eyed, with no assistance from a viewer, and is it the whole image that appears to drift around? If those are the case, then it's probably just a matter that your vision system isn't trained yet to stabilize the locked pair and ignore all the confusing mismatched stuff around the outside.Question for any one really? Why does my stereo image seem to move?.
If most of the image is stable, but you're experiencing some movement (I would call it "flicker") in isolated areas, then that's probably due to an incidental disparity between the two images, with your visual system alternately paying attention to one eye and then the other. In this pair, there are a couple of places like that around the proboscis, especially the lower side of the long straight section.
--Rik