As a not quite middle aged dude, I only just now figured out how to see magic eye stuff. I tried a couple times in elementary school but didn’t get it so I stopped. Had a few drinks earlier, stumbled on some magic eye pic that I could see clear as day and it blew my mind a little

  • palordrolap
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    915 days ago

    My parents were of the opinion they were an elaborate hoax until they had me draw what I saw in one of them.

    This was in a newspaper 30 or so years ago maybe. The image was accompanied by a depth-map image of what should be visible, but they covered that up. Then they asked if I’d looked at the newspaper before them because, even with my terrible art skills, it was clearly what was in the depth-map version.

    I think they believed me in the end though.

  • @[email protected]
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    14 days ago

    Absolutely loved them as a kid! Had a quite a few books.

    You can do them two different ways. The normal way with the object popping out towards you and an inverted way with crossing your eyes that inverts the shape.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      815 days ago

      I’m pretty sure I did it the cross eyed way. I’m doo trunk to understand how to do it another way

      • @[email protected]
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        715 days ago

        Bring the page close to your nose, let your eyes kinda naturally loose focus from distance. Then slowly start to pull the page back and you should get it.

        Kinda difficult to describe.

        Check back when you are sober and see if you get it to work.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 days ago

          This works, but the quicker method for me was to hold the book over my head, out of my line of sight while I focused my eyes on something a little farther away (a few feet away is fine). Then you can simply move the book downward into your field of vision while refusing to let your eyes refocus. It should be blurry, because you’re still focusing past it, despite it being right in front of your face. Then just relax and let your brain do the work.

          This method got by far the quickest and most reliable results for me, most pop suddenly into view in just a couple seconds.

          I think this method works best because you’re using established muscle memory to focus your eyes on an object at a measurable, consistent distance, and then just not letting them change. Removes several variables from the equation.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          415 days ago

          Maybe I have it mixed up then because the way I’m doing it is losing focus and letting it adjust until I see something. I thought I was going crosseyed but I didn’t have a mirror so I can’t be sure.

          • @[email protected]
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            315 days ago

            The way this works is that the image is designed to appear ‘beyond’ the surface it is printed on. It’s much easier to relax your eyes and pretend you’re looking at what’s ‘behind’ the paper. Kind of like 3d chalk art on the road in a way.

            The other way of crossing your eyes works because you’re swapping the left and right eye, which gives a different, inverted appearance. Instead of a foreground image popping out of the background, it looks like the other way. Like looking in a box, kinda.

            I can do both, but the latter is more difficult, sometimes requires a specific distance, and can be painful if you force it. If the image is too big, you may only be able to see a part of it. I think the first method is easier to do and to learn/train. Either way, you aren’t looking at what’s ‘on the surface’.

            The best way I can explain is: pretend you’re sitting on the toilet, really tired and you have nothing to look at so you just lose focus and gaze at random stuff. When the tiles or cracks start to make pictures that aren’t there, that’s kind of the effect you want.

              • @[email protected]
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                214 days ago

                Oh that one is a good one, it’s very busy. Using the first method the trees are on the ‘bottom’ and everything progressively pops out with the fish/turtle on ‘top’.

                The other way is reverse, the trees are on the ‘top’ and the fish are on the ‘bottom’ (like I’m looking in that ‘box’). It’s also really hard to see the whole picture this way, but that’s just me.

                Also, ‘In a Box’ might not be the best analogy, you can make one that intentionally feels like you’re looking inside something – it’s just that most of these are made to pop out at you.

          • @[email protected]
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            315 days ago

            For the cross eye version you just need to hold out the page at normal viewing distance and cross your eyes till the 3d image pops.

            Sounds like you are doing it the regular way. Which is the more difficult one for most people that have issues with magic eyes.

            Glad you got to experience them!

              • @[email protected]
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                214 days ago

                Here’s another one for ya! If you do it the right way you’ll clearly see the turtles head pop out towards you and with the cross eye way it’s quite difficult to recognize the head when it’s pushed backwards.

    • Rhynoplaz
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      215 days ago

      I think I usually saw the inverted version. I could make out the shapes, but they never popped out.

  • LostXOR
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    1015 days ago

    I can view the convergent (cross-eyed) ones no problem. I managed once to focus on the divergent ones with like 30 minutes of practice, but I had trouble focusing normally afterwards for like an hour so I haven’t tried since.

  • @[email protected]
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    2114 days ago

    Yes. They require stereoscopic vision. When I was doing research on 3D displays about 10% of subjects had to be rejected because they were stereo blind. They had no idea they were that way.

    One woman said that explains why she had the nickname clunk in high school. She had a habit of rearending cars.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 days ago

      I’m one of the stereo blind. I was kind of glad when I found out from the eye doctor. It explained why I could rarely catch a baseball without getting hit.

      • @[email protected]
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        113 days ago

        So depending on why you might be able to train it. If you don’t have a lazy eye and have good vision you may want to look into it.

        If your brain is just not fusing two good images there is a good chance you can train it to do so. Having done experiments in this field I can tell you it makes a measurable difference in performance.

        A good read on the subject is below. The part where she first sees a tree in 3D is a good example of what you are missing.

        Fixing My Gaze: A Scientist’s Journey Into Seeing in Three Dimensions by Susan R Barry

  • @[email protected]
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    1414 days ago

    Yes.

    The instructions say don’t cross your eyes but that’s horseshit and probably why so many people fail to see them.

    My method is to cross my eyes, then uncross them slowly until the 3d effect appears, then hold on that position.

    • @[email protected]
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      314 days ago

      But then you see them inverted.

      3d cross eyed pictures and magic eye work in similar but different ways

      • @[email protected]
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        11 days ago

        Yup you want to focus farther than the picture. Crossing your eyes makes you focus closer.

  • @[email protected]
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    1113 days ago

    Now that you’ve figured it out, behold: Stereograms!

    The above satellite images from NASA allow you to SEE the topography in 3D.

    • @[email protected]
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      313 days ago

      These are awesome thanks for sharing. Also, if you can do magic eye and stereograms, try crossing your eyes when playing those “find the differences between these two pictures” games. They are incredibly easy if you cross your eyes.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      Weird question if anyone happens to know: when I look at these combined, it looks like the elevated parts go INTO the image rather than pop out, like it’s 3D but inverse. I have always been able to see Magic Eyes with no difficulty, but I’ve also had some form of exotropia that I can control to trigger the depth. Should I be doing something different with these stereograms?

      Edit: realized this might be expected? Since the instructions on these say to cross your eyes, but the exotropia makes one eye go outward, but I guess I’m confused how I can see any combined depth image at all now lol

      • @[email protected]
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        213 days ago

        You’re doing “wall eyed” viewing. These are for “cross-eyed” viewing. “Wall-eyed” means your eyes are focusing at a point behind the image. You need to cross your eyes for these. Try putting your finger in between your screen and your eyes, varying the distance until the dots merge. Then, remove your finger, focusing on the image itself. That should allow for cross-eyed viewing.

        • ...m...
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          313 days ago

          …i prefer wall-eyed stereograms because cross-eyed orientation makes the picture look tiny…

          • @[email protected]
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            213 days ago

            Fair. I, too, prefer wall-eyed, but these were prepared by NASA. You could edit the image to swap the two and make them Wall-eyed, though!

    • @[email protected]
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      113 days ago

      Omg I’ve never been able to do a magic eye before, but I think there stereograms just unlocked it for me! I Feel like I get it now, thanks!

  • @[email protected]
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    2014 days ago

    Someone made a modified version of Quake back in the day, that rendered to stereoscopic 3D in a white noise pattern.

    It was such a mindfuck to play!

    You get 3D depth but no colors or shades or contrast. It’s just shapes moving. So doors that were flush with the wall were impossible to see, but enemies in dark rooms were fully visible because there is no light or dark.

    I like to imagine I got to experience what a bat sees with echolocation.

  • @[email protected]
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    314 days ago

    Yep. There was one on the Sunday comics page every week when I was a kid, and I learned how to do it then. I never understood the people who can’t do it, or thought it was fake.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 days ago

      Same here, before I found out it is literally impossible for me to see them I had one of the books and I would stare at it for hours trying to make it work. Of all the annoyances of being half blind, not being able to see magic eyes is the one that bothers me most.

  • @[email protected]
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    413 days ago

    I didn’t think I could but interestingly enough discovered a technique that works earlier today. Basically get really close whilst staring at a point then gradually move away. It actually is an amazing effect

  • @[email protected]
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    315 days ago

    I can, but it is sometimes tricky. Usually I can make the image go into 3D mode without too much trouble, but I sometimes can’t figure out what I’m supposed to be seeing. Like, I can tell that things are at different depths but I have a hard time resolving it into a complete cohesive image. I think it is mostly due to the weird random pattern that makes up the image and the difficulty in finding how the edges work together. It could just be shitty stereograms, though, since most of them work fine.

  • @[email protected]
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    315 days ago

    I used to, but its been years since I’ve tried, and I’ve had to get stronger glasses a couple of time since then.

  • @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    I love them! Generally find that once you get one it’s a lot easier. I find that if I’ve not looked at one for a while, and 8k kit getting it, and I go back to the first one I got (some boxing kangaroos) and normally it just clicks again.

    My partner can’t see them, and is convinced it’s just a dumb hoax that people on the Internet play pretending they can see them.

  • BurgerBaron
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    415 days ago

    I couldn’t because really bad astigmatism, but after ICL surgery I could. Magic Eye is really cool, binged the greatest hits after I found out I could see them.