Tulip Festival - Skagit Valley - April 10, 2010
Hello everyone,
Recently I've figured out some interesting effect: if you turn your LCD(!) monitor by 90 degrees, and look on it from about 11 inches (30 sentimeters), than you're going to see that the picture gained some almost physical depth!
This happens because usually LCD monitors are not optimized for looking on them from that position, and they simply do not support such a wide angle of view. From that close distance as I said, each eye sees its own variances of the color tones and the tone/luminosity very depends on both the angle of seeing and color/level of light of any particular area of the image. This is where the brain gets confused and starts recognizing the pictuare as having depth.
Read MoreRecently I've figured out some interesting effect: if you turn your LCD(!) monitor by 90 degrees, and look on it from about 11 inches (30 sentimeters), than you're going to see that the picture gained some almost physical depth!
This happens because usually LCD monitors are not optimized for looking on them from that position, and they simply do not support such a wide angle of view. From that close distance as I said, each eye sees its own variances of the color tones and the tone/luminosity very depends on both the angle of seeing and color/level of light of any particular area of the image. This is where the brain gets confused and starts recognizing the pictuare as having depth.