A câmera toma uma imagem de primeiro plano e outra de segundo plano de qualquer foto. Um processador dentro dela mistura as imagens, juntando-as, para criar "uma imagem que salta em sua direção", segundo Theo Georghiades, gerente de produtos digitais da FujiFilm. As pessoas poderão ver as imagens de várias maneiras. Poderá ser através de uma tela de 2,8 polegadas na traseira da câmera, ou poderão comprar um quadro digital de 8 polegadas que reproduzirá fotos ou vídeos. Custará por volta de US$ 510. Poderão, ainda, enviar as imagens por e-mail para um laboratório no Japão, que imprimirá manualmente as fotos em um papel lenticulado - para produzir uma imagem que fará alguns lembrarem dos anos 70, quando fabricantes de cereais incluiam cartões 3D de personagens de desenhos animados num papel especial, espesso, dentro das caixas.
3D FujiFilm camera to go on sale in September
A camera that can take three-dimensional photographs and videos promises to "revolutionize the world of photography". FujiFilm 3D: The FinePix REAL 3D W1 camera looks like a normal digital camera, but it has two lenses and two sensors.
Families will be able to see beach balls leap out of their holiday snaps, and watch their children's nativity plays in full 3D, without the need for any glasses.
FujiFilm, the Japanese film and camera company, unveiled the gadget on Wednesday in Tokyo. It is expected to cost about US$ 700 and will be sold in high-end department stores.
The FinePix REAL 3D W1 camera looks like a normal digital camera, but it has two lenses and two sensors, which take an image of the foreground and the background of any picture.
A processor within the camera then blends the two images together to create a "image that jumps out at you", according to Theo Georghiades, the digital product manager at FujiFilm.
People can see the image in a number of ways. They can either view it on an 2.8 inch screen on the back of the camera, or they can buy a special 8 inch digital photo frame that can display the videos or pictures. This special viewer will cost about US$ 510.
Or consumers can email their images to a laboratory in Japan, which will manually print the photographs out on lenticulated paper – to produce an image some people will remember from the 1970s, when breakfast cereal companies included 3D cards of cartoon characters on the special, thick, lined paper inside their boxes.
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