![]() It made 16 stereo pairs on 20-exposure 35mm film. Stereocrafters - Videon – The Videon is a 35mm stereo camera comprising a bakelite-type plastic body with metal top and bottom plates, produced by Stereocrafters of Wisconsin, USA, in the 1950s.Stereo Realist – The original "Realist Format" camera, first sold in 1947, which inspired many imitators who introduced cameras capable of producing the 5P stereo slides which remain fairly popular to this day. ![]() RBT announced the discontinuation of the cameras on January 1, 2011. ![]() RBT – In the modern 3D world, a several thousand dollar RBT camera was made in Germany by rebuilding two 35mm high end cameras into an integrated and unitized stereo camera.Though it didn't "catch on" and was soon discontinued, it inspired many 3 and 4 lens clones marketed well into the 1990s. Nimslo 3D – The first compact consumer level lenticular camera, designed to take 3D prints that are viewable without glasses or special technique.Loreo also makes currently, a cross-view 35mm film only, 3D CAMERA, (model 321) which takes "deeper" stereo images, with a wider mirror system, sold with a folding print viewer included. The latest version has 25mm wider angle lenses. Loreo 3D Lens in a Cap (Hong Kong), an accessory device, which incorporates a pair of small closely spaced lens, and a simple mirror box as an attachment for many modern SLR digital cameras.Kodak Stereo Camera – Kodak's own offering in the field of Realist format cameras which actually outsold the Realist during the five years it was available and might have eclipsed it in all time sales had it been introduced prior to the end of 1954.There have been many types of cameras that take stereo images, most of which are no longer manufactured. Examples include would be a vintage Rolleiflex or a modern twin lens like a Mamiya C330. These are usually in a vertical configuration. ![]() A twin-lens reflex camera uses one lens to image to a focusing/composition screen and the other to capture the image on film. Not all two-lens cameras are used for taking stereoscopic photos. Stereo cameras are sometimes mounted in cars to detect the lane's width and the proximity of an object on the road. This method has problems with objects moving in the different views, though works well with still life. If the image is edited so that each eye sees a different image, then the image will appear to be 3D. In the 1950s, stereo cameras gained some popularity with the Stereo Realist and similar cameras that employed 135 film to make stereo slides.ģD pictures following the theory behind stereo cameras can also be made more inexpensively by taking two pictures with the same camera, but moving the camera a few inches either left or right. The distance between the lenses in a typical stereo camera (the intra-axial distance) is about the distance between one's eyes (known as the intra-ocular distance) and is about 6.35 cm, though a longer base line (greater inter-camera distance) produces more extreme 3-dimensionality. Stereo cameras may be used for making stereoviews and 3D pictures for movies, or for range imaging. This allows the camera to simulate human binocular vision, and therefore gives it the ability to capture three-dimensional images, a process known as stereo photography. ![]() The two lower lenses are used for the photograph, while the third lens is used for composition.Ī stereo camera is a type of camera with two or more lenses with a separate image sensor or film frame for each lens. ![]()
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