3D Stereo Slides Digitized To Prints

We can make prints from your 3d Stereo slides. We digitize the slides first and then we make prints at your direction from the digital images. We will crop the images to the size print that you desire trying to make sure that the most important parts fo the stereo slides are preserved. You tell us what size prints you need and we will crop the image accordingly. If you want different size prints made from the same slide, we will do precise cropping to duplicate images for each print size.
Quality of prints will depend on the quality of the 3d Stereo slides that you send us. We will do what we can to make sure your slide scans have color restored if the films have faded.
Scanning is $1 per side of the Stereo Slide. Prints are After Scanning Costs:
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Each print: 4 x 6": |
$0.49 |
5" x 7" prints |
$1.49 |
8 x 10" prints |
$2.99 |
| 10" x 15" prints | $5.99 |
| Wallet Prints, sheet of 4 | $1.50 |
Click here to Figure your 3d Stereo Slide to Prints Cost. |
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Stereoscopy
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
Stereoscopy, stereoscopic imaging or 3-D (three-dimensional) imaging is any technique capable of recording three-dimensional visual information or creating the illusion of depth in an image. The illusion of depth in a photograph, movie, or other two-dimensional image is created by presenting a slightly different image to each eye. Many 3D displays use this method to convey images. It was first invented by Sir Charles Wheatstone in 1840.[1] Stereoscopy is used in photogrammetry and also for entertainment through the production of stereograms. Stereoscopy is useful in viewing images rendered from large multi-dimensional data sets such as are produced by experimental data. Modern industrial three dimensional photography may use 3D scanners to detect and record 3 dimensional information. The three-dimensional depth information can be reconstructed from two images using a computer by corresponding the pixels in the left and right images. Solving the Correspondence problem in the field of Computer Vision aims to create meaningful depth information from two images. Traditional stereoscopic photography consists of creating a 3-D illusion starting from a pair of 2-D images. The easiest way to create depth perception in the brain is to provide the eyes of the viewer with two different images, representing two perspectives of the same object, with a minor deviation similar to the perspectives that both eyes naturally receive in binocular vision. If eyestrain and distortion are to be avoided, each of the two 2-D images preferably should be presented to each eye of the viewer so that any object at infinite distance seen by the viewer should be perceived by that eye while it is oriented straight ahead, the viewer's eyes being neither crossed nor diverging. When the picture contains no object at infinite distance, such as a horizon or a cloud, the pictures should be spaced correspondingly closer together.


