Posts Tagged ‘educational’
Federal Navy, Civil War – Wiggle Animation
Photographs of the Federal Navy, and seaborne expeditions against the Atlantic Coast of the Confederacy, Civil War.
View the original image from the Library of Congress here.
Click the image for the big version. See the full collection at clicksypics.com. To find out how these are created, go here.
East Corridor, LoC – Stereoscopic Animation
Our taxpayer dollars at work, without which these images wouldn’t be available. Take a tour here, search the digital image library here.
To view the complete collection in full resolution, visit clicksypics.com To find out how these are created, go here.
Royal Albert Hall, London – Stereoscopic Animation
See what it looks like today here.
To view the complete collection in full resolution, visit clicksypics.com To find out how these are created, go here.
Arc de Triomph – Stereoscopic Wiggle Animation
A Paris, France Landmark built around 1806. See it as it is today here.
To view the complete collection in full resolution, visit clicksypics.com To find out how these are created, go here.
New Website
I’ve completed the major construction to my new website at clicksypics.com! It’s a collection of unique old photographs and animations.
I’m really enjoying the historical stereo card animations. Stereo card photographs are an old photography trick. They are comprised of two photographs taken at slightly different angles, usually with a single camera that has two lenses. The two photographs were placed onto a photo card which was viewed in a special viewer to see a 3-D image. They were frequently used as teaching tools in the mid to late 1800′s and early 1900′s.

Playing around in Photoshop, I’ve found a way to recreate the 3-D illusion with wiggle animations. It’s almost eerie seeing these old images come to life. I’m still perfecting the technique right now, and each animation is a little better than the last. Many of these old photos are damaged, and unevenly, so most images must have minor digital modifications to make them more realistic and clear. In addition I’m slowing down the animation with more frames. This process increases the file size, so future animations will likely be clearer but smaller in dimension.
I’m hoping they become a good source to assist teachers with history lessons. The library is growing! Let me know what you think, and I hope you enjoy the site!






