
How to see 3D Pictures
Look at the two red smilies. Diverge your eyes as though you are looking through the image into the distance. Diverge your focus into the distance until you see two smilies turn into three smilies.
When you clearly see three smilies, at that distance the hidden 3D image will magically appear. Once you perceive the hidden image and depth, you can look around the entire 3D image easily. The longer you look, the clearer the illusion becomes.
In 1991 computer programmer Tom Baccei and artist Cheri Smith created the first color random-dot autostereograms.
An autostereogram is a single-image stereogram (SIS), designed to create the visual illusion of a three-dimensional (3D) scene within the human brain from an external two-dimensional image. In order to perceive 3D shapes in these autostereograms, one must overcome the normally automatic coordination between accommodation (focus) and vergence (angle of one's eyes).
In order to fill in the missing coordinates, you will have to view the 3D images and answer a question that will give you a number which corresponds with a digit in the coordinates. Click the "Back Arrow" to return to the Cache Page.
N 35 AB.CDE W 078 FG.HIJ
Click here for "A". Number of Water Fowl?
Click here for "B". Digit made by second letter?
Click here for "C". Number chicks in the nest
Click here for "D". Second Digit?
Click here for "E". Number of Deer
Click here for "F". Number of rows of ducks in the picture!
Click here for "G". Number of Rings?
Click here for "H". Number of Cheerleaders?
Click here for "I". Digit made by second letter?
Click here for "J". Number of Fish?
Click here to "check coordinates"
CONGRATULATIONS "Mitchell769" FTF >