Tag: stereoscopic camera

The 1930s Thornton-Pickard Stereo Puck Camera: Introduction, User Guide and a Review

The 1930s Thornton-Pickard Stereo Puck Camera: Introduction, User Guide and a Review

The Stereo Puck is a simple 120-roll film stereoscopic (3-D) box camera, which can still be fully usable today. In this post, you will find a complete guide to the camera, including an introduction, a step-by-step guide to using it, with a few useful downloads, and a review.

Happy New Year, 2026!

Happy New Year, 2026!

Wishing everyone a very happy New Year, with a cheeky stereoscopic photograph in the post to celebrate.

The Acer SpatialLabs Eyes Camera – A Review

The Acer SpatialLabs Eyes Camera – A Review

Denis Pellerin reviews the Acer SpatialLabs Eyes digital stereoscopic 3-D camera: from its unboxing, initial impressions, and as he starts taking it through its paces for stereoscopic photography.

Acer Announces New Stereoscopic 3-D Camera: Acer SpatialLabs Eyes

Acer Announces New Stereoscopic 3-D Camera: Acer SpatialLabs Eyes

Acer has announced the launch of its new SpatialLabs Eyes stereoscopic 3-D camera. Whilst I've not seen the camera itself yet, the specs., possibilities, and examples of stereo photos and videos it has produced look really promising.

Using Your iPhone 15 Pro, 16 or 17 as a Stereoscopic 3-D Camera: A Step-By-Step Guide

Using Your iPhone 15 Pro, 16 or 17 as a Stereoscopic 3-D Camera: A Step-By-Step Guide

How to start using the iPhone 15 Pro, 15 Pro Max or iPhone 16s or 17s (except 16e and Air) as stereoscopic cameras, with some examples of unedited videos and photos captured directly from one to show the quality of the stereoscopic depth and camera lenses.

Alfred A. Hart: American Photographer for the Central Pacific Railroad, Remembered with a Stereoscopic Camera Memorial

Alfred A. Hart: American Photographer for the Central Pacific Railroad, Remembered with a Stereoscopic Camera Memorial

In this Stereoscopy Day post, we're paying tribute to photographer Alfred A. Hart and California historian Mead B. Kibbey, looking at Hart's stereoscopic photos of the CPRR.