Joe, Barry, ENTS,

You can take stereo photographs with a single digital camera provided that the 
subject is not moving.  Here are some sites that talk about the process:  

Making your own 3M Photos
I presently use four methods to generate 3D images of the real world.  I refer 
to the real world to differentiate from computer generated 3D, such as ray 
traced images.  The four methods I employ utilize a standard camera, a video 
camera, a scanner, and a QX3 USB microscope. 
http://www.3dphoto.net/text/taking/taking.html

Digital Stereo Photography  
The art and science of twin camera digital stereo photography.   This site 
features digital stereo photographic pairs, along with practical details for 
creating your own digital stereo photographs: techniques, cameras, controllers, 
flash, sync monitors, and mounts. 
http://www.ledametrix.com/

http://www.studio3d.com/pages/stereophoto.html

http://www.photostuff.co.uk/stereo.htm

http://home.att.net/~osps/tutorial/

There are quite a few more sites on the web that talks about 3D photos and even 
a 3D forum.

Ed


"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Barry Caselli 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, August 05, 2009 4:36 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: A good day in the field


        That would be awesome. I never knew of anyone having a camera like that.

        --- On Wed, 8/5/09, Joseph Zorzin <[email protected]> wrote:


          From: Joseph Zorzin <[email protected]>
          Subject: [ENTS] Re: A good day in the field
          To: [email protected]
          Date: Wednesday, August 5, 2009, 4:40 AM


          when I see such pictures- and they are very nice- I wonder how they'd 
look with a fish eye lens? anyone have one?

          another camera option I'd love to try if I could afford it is a 
double camera designed to take 3-D images, which you then look at with a 
viewer, as we all did as children- I still remember how much those viewers blew 
me away- I'd love to use one for forest photography

          Joe
            ----- Original Message ----- 
            From: Randy Brown 
            To: [email protected] 
            Sent: Tuesday, August 04, 2009 9:28 PM
            Subject: [ENTS] Re: A good day in the field



              The next image looks high into the canopy of the Algonquin Pines. 
The sight is inspirational. When I go to the Algonquin Pines, I frequent the 
location of this image. There is a substantial difference between looking up 
into the canopy of 90 to 100-foot trees versus those near and above 150. This 
brings me to a point.


            Ahhh.. beautiful canopy shots.   Here's a few good ones I've gotten 
in Ohio.
            #1 Is looking up into a ~120' Tulip trees in Mohican State Forest.  
 #2 Is a grove ~140+' white pines in Hocking Hills State Forest.








       
    
     
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