Flash
This page is to be viewed through 3D/anaglyph glasses.
The background of each of the animations below is a scanned page from a 3D sketching set. Blue and red lines create depth in
the background level while moving images test the capability of animation as a vehicle for a stereographic image. “Flat” text is juxtaposed to the “dimensional” text. However, the dimension does not appear until a special instrument—the 3D glasses—is used.
This is an example of how a color scheme can trick the human brain to fill in the gap between two displaced images and to collide red and blue images
into one three-dimensional illusion. Each of the following animations requires a different level of strain on the eye, and the clarity
of dimension depends on the quality of vision and on perception of each viewer. No two people can physically see the depth in
the same way. And this is the beauty of mixing “analog” anaglyph techniques with animations created in Adobe Flash CS4.