Arnold Sher Posted November 21, 2011 Share Posted November 21, 2011 Hi everyone, My question is directed to the guys that have used vray 2.0 stereoscopic image generator and did you guys managed to get to work. The rendering out is pretty straight forward, one gets a left image and the right image in a single render, then we put into stereophoto maker software to generate the image which we generate. The trouble is that we can see the cyan and magenta edges and we have the 3d glasses that we get from cinema and we have fancy ones that comes with Samsung 3d TV but we cannot for the live of it get the image to become "3d". Can anyone point us to the right direction as the more we've read about it the more confused we got. Thanks guys... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lehm Posted November 21, 2011 Share Posted November 21, 2011 Sounds like you're mixing 3d technologies. There are several different ways to display 3d images you can't use the glasses from one technology to view another. sounds like your are producing a cyan/magenta image. You'll need to use Cyan/Magenta glasses to view it. The glasses you get in the cinema are polarized so you'd need a polarized monitor to view them. The Samsung glasses are probably active shutter...and probably incompatible with pc. They do make active shutter systems for the pc however. For these two types of systems (polarized/active shutter) you'd need to produce the image differently and use playback software that supports stereoscopic playback. Easiest (but not the best) way would be to just get yourself cyan/magenta glasses. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RealSpace3D Posted November 24, 2011 Share Posted November 24, 2011 Another option is VR glasses. Two screens, right in front of your eyes. The resolution used to be pretty bad, but the just came out with a new version. They are much cheaper than buying a whole new monitor http://www.vuzix.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Graphite Posted November 27, 2011 Share Posted November 27, 2011 you might be able to utilize the active shutter 3d system if you have the nvidia 3d set up. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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