How do the red/blue 3D glasses work?

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How do the red/blue 3D glasses work?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The reason you can see in 3D in the first place is because the image you see through each eye is slightly different. You can experiment with that by masking one eye, then the other. You will see some objects shift relatively to other ones. Also, if you keep one eye masked, it gets harder to grab an item that is far enough (you have some space awareness sense that will compensate for that, but that’s not the point of this ELI5).

So, if you somehow managed to print an image of something, and you could make it so that each eye sees a different one, then you would see in 3D.

Light filters have entered the chat.

When you look through a red glass/plastic, only red light goes through and all other colors appear black (including blue). When you look through a blue glass/plastic, of course, the blue goes through and the red is blocked.

So there you have it. Take two pictures that are slightly offset, reduce them to a grey scale, tint one of them in red, the other in blue, and you have a 3D image.

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