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Turn your photo into sirds
Turn your photo into sirds







So far, while experimenting with my own depth maps and examples, I have been using a free stereogram builder website to get an idea of how my images will look.

turn your photo into sirds

I am thinking I will need to either work on some more small, complicated patterns and hope they turn out how I want, or just use the default patterned backgrounds in SIRDS which look good but aren’t original.Īfter searching and searching I finally came across the perfect program to generate my stereograms. To try fix this I made the pattern even smaller in Illustrator but it still didn’t look right in SIRDS. It is also very difficult to see the hand depth map underneath. My pattern image appears zoomed in and cropped, looking completely different to what I want. I then came across an issue when importing this pattern into SIRDS, the program I am using to generate my stereograms. From my previous research of stereograms, these 2D backgrounds should look busy to hide any trace of the depth map inside it. Using these specific colours, I created a random circle pattern in Illustrator and repeated it over an A3 sized page. I used  to randomly generate different colour schemes and stopped when I found one I liked the look of (shown below).

#Turn your photo into sirds how to

This pattern is what the viewer will initially see, and perhaps all they will see if they can’t figure out how to view the stereogram correctly, so colours that look good together are a must. To start working on my 2D patterns which will be the background for my stereograms, I decided I needed to work with good colour schemes.







Turn your photo into sirds