Fantastic to find this here, many thanks for posting it: I just read about this today in Brian May's latest 3D book, "Stereoscopy" (which talks a lot about Duboscq). Unlike is mentioned in some comments here, I'm pretty sure you need to diverge your eyes (i.e. "parallel view) rather than cross them to see this - but, with the left image being unfortunately so faded and deteriorated it's quite difficult to fuse the two images into a single coherent stereo one. Also, as was the case with the early experiments in 3D, the diffence in angle between the two images is quite extreme which doesn't help. Awesome stuff though, thanks again.
That's cool, I'm glad he's spreading the word about these early experiments. Did he mention the work of Coleman Sellers? I recently came across another example of a "film" like this from an issue of The Magic Lantern Journal published about 15 or 20 years ago. It was produced by a different photographer, who's name eludes me, some time in 1870s. I'll have to post it here some time, in animated form.
You're not the only one... It only came across to my home after seeing "Passage de Venus (1974)" which is to believe that this is the first motion picture ever filmed...
Fantastic to find this here, many thanks for posting it: I just read about this today in Brian May's latest 3D book, "Stereoscopy" (which talks a lot about Duboscq). Unlike is mentioned in some comments here, I'm pretty sure you need to diverge your eyes (i.e. "parallel view) rather than cross them to see this - but, with the left image being unfortunately so faded and deteriorated it's quite difficult to fuse the two images into a single coherent stereo one. Also, as was the case with the early experiments in 3D, the diffence in angle between the two images is quite extreme which doesn't help. Awesome stuff though, thanks again.
That's cool, I'm glad he's spreading the word about these early experiments. Did he mention the work of Coleman Sellers? I recently came across another example of a "film" like this from an issue of The Magic Lantern Journal published about 15 or 20 years ago. It was produced by a different photographer, who's name eludes me, some time in 1870s. I'll have to post it here some time, in animated form.
OOGA booga
Incredible! And in 3-D, too! Where did you find this?
I found it by chance when researching a similar 3D film by a guy called Coleman Sellers
@@oldfilmsandstuff4679 I'm really annoyed with myself that I didn't come across this when researching him too.
love his. and its also 3D and ultra widescreen!
Did you find this, or is this from someone else? Either way, I’m still grateful you posted it.
Back then people didn't have to cross their eyes to see this in 3D
Wow! Amazing!
I crossed my eyes and it looked 3d, but the age of the print was interfering in many of the dimensions.
Wow! Is this really from 1852?! Very interesting
wait what this is the first ultra widescreen yt video ive ever seen. how did u do that?
RUclips supports pretty much any aspect ratio that you throw at it these days
Crazy
Wow
i think im the only Filipino🇵🇭 here who got recommended to this video
You're not the only one...
It only came across to my home after seeing "Passage de Venus (1974)" which is to believe that this is the first motion picture ever filmed...