I've been creating anaglyph 3D images for over twenty years. Since 1993 I've been experimenting with computer-generated images, mostly using a time-consuming process called raytracing.
In 2000 I purchased an Argus 3D camera (distributed by the Discovery Store), which, despite its flaws, has the twin advantages of low price and simple film processing. Since then I've taken literally thousands of 3D snapshots with it, and I expect to take many more. (I also own a Nimslo, but the thing is so cheaply-made that I'm afraid I'll snap something off every time I use it.)
Recently, however, I've taken a jump into the big time, having received a Stereo
Realist as a gift. After I've solved the problems of processing and
scanning, I will post images made with this classic camera.
A note on the image to the right: this is a stereo photograph of a camera I've wanted for twenty-five years, built three years before I was born, taken with a little CCD camera attached to a $130 handheld computer an order of magnitude more powerful than the computers that flew on the Apollo moon missions. Now how cool is that?