Original Post

How many people who draw 3D , cross their eyes to see the images? This is Morintari’s wife. We are having a conversation about this tonight.

9 Replies

Yes, that’s how I see the 3D.

Crosseye doesn’t work well for me, so I always use anaglyph glasses.

Doesn’t work well for me either. I can just see it but with lots of eye strain.

I have never gotten this to work either. It just hurts my eyes. I have always wondered if I’m not doing it “right” but at the same time, I’m not sure how you would do it wrong.

Morintari wrote:
How many people who draw 3D , cross their eyes to see the images? This is Morintari’s wife. We are having a conversation about this tonight.

I cross my eyes to edit 3D images in Photoshop … 🙂

mellott124 wrote:
Doesn’t work well for me either. I can just see it but with lots of eye strain.

astro187 wrote:
I have always wondered if I’m not doing it “right” but at the same time, I’m not sure how you would do it wrong.

Did you guys try both – crossed and parallel viewing? Because parallel causes much more eye strain for me than crossing …

It is very difficult for me to see a clear 3D image by crossing my eyes, but I’ve managed to do it. It is much easier for me to see a 3D image by diverging my eyes.

i learned how to cross my eyes for 3d years ago. it used to be hard but now i can do it pretty easy.

simplest way to do it is to put your finger in front of your eyes and then focus past that to the image in front of you.

It didn’t take me long to learn cross-eye, and it comes very easily to me now.

It gives me no eye-strain, unless the images are quite far apart, or don’t correlate very well (I like to hunt for “accidental” stereo pairs online :-)). It helps to sit farther away from the screen.

I can do wall-eye in certain situations, but it’s much harder to achieve and maintain fusion.

 

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