Amich35 Posted August 11 Share #1 Posted August 11 Advertisement (gone after registration) Can someone please share with me an image of a stereoly slide? Content doesn't matter, I'm just curious about what the single slide with two images looks like. Thanks much, Mike--- Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted August 11 Posted August 11 Hi Amich35, Take a look here Stereoly Slide. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
jankap Posted August 11 Share #2 Posted August 11 (edited) My digital camera produces this type. The ending is ".jps". Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here… Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! In the analog classic ones the left and right picture were in a paper frame on eye distance (6,5cm). There are/were the Viewmaster discs too. Edited August 11 by jankap 1 Link to post Share on other sites Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! In the analog classic ones the left and right picture were in a paper frame on eye distance (6,5cm). There are/were the Viewmaster discs too. ' data-webShareUrl='https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/423609-stereoly-slide/?do=findComment&comment=5846611'>More sharing options...
Amich35 Posted August 11 Author Share #3 Posted August 11 Rather than the images, can you show me what an actual slide looks like? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jankap Posted August 11 Share #4 Posted August 11 (edited) I see, you mean this here: Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here… Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! My father had one after the 2. WW. There is the Leitz VORSA too. I don´t have an example of a negative or a slide. One gets two pictures on the negative, side by side; so the format is 17 x 24 mm. But in portrait mode, that is not very interesting for stereo. Another disadvantage is, that the effective focal length increases. A 50mm lens gives a picture of a 75mm. Edited August 11 by jankap Link to post Share on other sites Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! My father had one after the 2. WW. There is the Leitz VORSA too. I don´t have an example of a negative or a slide. One gets two pictures on the negative, side by side; so the format is 17 x 24 mm. But in portrait mode, that is not very interesting for stereo. Another disadvantage is, that the effective focal length increases. A 50mm lens gives a picture of a 75mm. ' data-webShareUrl='https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/423609-stereoly-slide/?do=findComment&comment=5846707'>More sharing options...
jankap Posted August 11 Share #5 Posted August 11 By the way, at the top of this window you find the switch "Leica Wiki", with information about more or less all Leica products. I remembered, that my father had a stereoly for a short time, therefore I answered your question directly. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
TomB_tx Posted August 11 Share #6 Posted August 11 I believe the Stereoly slide is just like a standard 35 mm 24x36 slide but has both 17x24 image side by side. The viewer shown in the Wiki has eyepieces and prisms to spread the 2 images apart to normal L-R eye spacing. I haven't seen a projector that would do the same for polarized stereo glasses. My dad used the Stereo Realist camera that used two lenses at eye spacing, and slides had separate films for L & R also spaced with normal eye spacing. He also used a stereo projector that used the slides with two spaced lenses with polarizers, which projected to a smooth screen and were viewed using polarized glasses. It made for an effective slide show once a photographer learned to compose images with depth elements (foreground - mid - distant). He gave me a Stereo Realist when I went to collage and I still have it and his slide archives and projector. The Kodachrome slides still look great. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
willeica Posted August 11 Share #7 Posted August 11 Advertisement (gone after registration) 12 hours ago, Amich35 said: Rather than the images, can you show me what an actual slide looks like? See page 4 here. It was envisaged that this could be viewed as a strip. I presume that mounting the two positives in a single slide mount was possible, but I've not seen one. p17233coll13_469.pdf William Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amich35 Posted August 11 Author Share #8 Posted August 11 I appreciate all of this! The images of the strip going through the viewer reminds me of Tru Vue which first appeared in 1933. That said, I'm sorry but I still haven't seen what I'm looking for. To be clear, I've been a stereo photographer for over 30 years with Kodak and Realist in film and then with the Fuji 3D and paired Sony x100s on a stereo bar in digital so I'm very familiar with the images, the cameras, and the processes. What I've never seen though is a picture of a mounted kodak stereoly slide on a light table or the strip of stereoly images on a light table so that the two images appear on one frame of film. I'm curious about their sizes versus other 3D formats. While the measurements help, a visual would be greate. Sorry for the lack of precision in my ask and I hope it's clear now what I'm seeking. Thanks much! Mike 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jankap Posted August 12 Share #9 Posted August 12 (edited) https://www.bridgemanimages.com/de/marden/3-d-stereo-photography-experiments-using-early-kodachrome-film-with-leitz-stereoly-at-1936-photo/photograph/asset/8776767 One can find (almost) all in the internet. Perhaps a question to AI would lead to success too. OR the AI would construct a fake picture according to the Leitz stereoly properties to please us.🤩 Edited August 12 by jankap 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wagner Lungov Posted August 19 Share #10 Posted August 19 I recently used the Stereoly and viewer. Here is a picture with two strips from a test of sepia vs regular development in black and white. Camera was a Leica D, film used: FOMA 100 R. Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here… Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! Link to post Share on other sites Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! ' data-webShareUrl='https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/423609-stereoly-slide/?do=findComment&comment=5850742'>More sharing options...
derleicaman Posted August 21 Share #11 Posted August 21 Thanks Wagner, I think that is what he is looking for. I will have a detailed article about the STEMAR in an upcoming issue of Viewfinder. It is written by Jeff Trilling, who is very involved with the stereo society. He has both a Midland and a Wetzlar version of the lens and has extensively analyzed the subtle differences in the two versions. He was with me recently in Wetzlar for the 100th Anniversary celebration, and took quite a number of Stemar pictures with his M10-P Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wagner Lungov Posted August 23 Share #12 Posted August 23 Thanks Derleicaman, I will follow it up in Viewfinder. I have one big doubt about the Stemar: do we need to turn each negative, right and left, up side down in order to get the right view? I mean like we do with a Stereo Realist, or does the device manage to place the right lens' image on the left side, and vice versa, like the Stereoly naturally, using just one lens, does? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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