In theatres
- Shiyas Yasin
Order them from American Science and Surplus.
Anaglyph glasses should be used to see 3D images, in order to create the glasses, two chromatically opposite colours are used side-by-side (one for each eye). These colours are usually red and cyan and when viewed together create an anaglyph 3D image.
If you need red/cyan and green/magenta 3d glasses, you can get it from people like the 3dstoreindia or search Google with 3d anaglyph glasses.
Anaglyph glasses are a type of 3D glasses that use filters of different colors to create a 3D effect when viewing images or video. These glasses typically have one red lens and one cyan (blue-green) lens, which work together to produce the illusion of depth perception by filtering the colors to create separate images for each eye.
An anaglyphic is any form of work with chased or embossed relief.
Yes you can. The PS3 will output the video in Anaglyph to your TV the same way it does with a game or DVD/Blu-Ray movie. The encoding is already done so all the PS3 does is stream the movie to your TV, it doesn't need to do any encoding in real time. You don't need a 3D TV either, but you will need an HD TV for Blu-Ray, although not for DVD. An Anaglyph DVD will play quite happily on a CRT TV just as well as an HD TV, from a standard DVD player as well as a PS3, and all you will need is a pair of Anaglyph glasses, usually supplied with the movie. If you want to make your own glasses, it's quite easy to do, but be aware that different films will need different colour lenses. Standard Anaglyph films like "My Bloody Valentine" or "Final Destination 4" need red/blue lenses, (the most common kind of Anaglyph glasses) but other films, such as "Ghosts of the Abyss", require stranger colours like yellow/magenta. The Anaglyph release of "Predators" requires red/cyan lenses, so the standard red/blue won't work. Also, Anaglyph glasses have an annoying tendency to cause eyestrain and headaches if worn for extended periods of time, such as the time required to watch a standard Feature Film!
3D glasses were first invented in the 1920s by American inventor Edwin S. Land. However, the concept of viewing images in 3D dates back to the 19th century. The modern version of 3D glasses, known as anaglyph glasses, became popular in the 1950s with the release of 3D movies.
bghfrgjhtrdbhcgfss
Glasses free 3D is at an experimental stage at present. The few examples are expensive and not impressive quality either. It will improve and the costs will come down in the future but if you are considering 3D television, don't wait for glasses free systems - it will be a long wait for you.
Stores They are Free
free
Press Esc > Options... > Video Settings... > 3D Anaglyph : OFF