Making these holograms can work two ways. One is the analygph and one is the "passive 3D" which has a 3D look even to the naked eye. Now, we've got Jin A Nana as our test subject of anaglyph vs. passive 3D.
Here's Jin A Nana with the classic anaglyph look
Apparently, red-cyan glasses may not go obsolete any time soon. In fact, there may still be people using them in the digital age. So, just the steps on how to do it are as follows:
- Open the desired picture you want to turn into an anaglyph.
- Duplicate the picture TWICE.
- For the first layer - go to blending options and turn off the red color. Name this layer left.
- For the second layer - go to blending options and turn off the green and blue colors. Name this layer right/
- Now, put your anaglyph glasses on and experiment. Move the first layer to the left three to five times. Move the second layer right three to five times. See which desired result you want. In this case, I moved the first layer left three times and right three times.
Now, try to constrast to this passive 3D image of Jin A Nana
For the process - click here. For better viewing results - get a pair of passive 3D glasses. Granted, flat screens are now the norm then you can view a not-so-3D cinema. I tend to use passive 3D glasses when I'm playing video games (even old school ones which are available via disks or paid download) wearing passive 3D glasses. So far, passive 3D glasses can be worn on top of regular eyeglasses too.
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