Hello Michael! I've been trying to follow this tutorial for a sequence of portrait images (as opposed to square or landscape) and no matter what I do, the picture comes out sideways. Rotating the pictures 90 degrees in either direction did not help, and swapping the width and height did not help. How can I make the lenticules run vertically down a portrait picture?
I just tried it with a 18-frame jpg sequence with 8:10 aspect ratio (portrait orientation) and it worked fine. I'm not sure why it isn't working for you. I used picture width of 203mm and picture height of 254mm. You might want to contact the software developer: Yitzhak Weissman.
@@MichaelBrownArtist This actually solved my problem! My problem was that my pictures were a different aspect ratio than the lens, and I input the aspect ratio of the lens into the height and width. I made my pictures 4x6 and now it works. Thank you very much!
Hi Michael, Big fan here. a Question, if im using GRAPE interlacing software, but i want to have the effect, not with 2 images (as you show) but 3 images or 4 how will be the correct order? using the same example, if i want a morning - afternoon - evening - night images, how will be the amount of each image? and the correct order? thank you so much.
Four images will probably have ghosting. Load them in the order you described. I would start with equal numbers of each frame. I don’t think this will work very well unless you are using a really low LPI sheet.
Hi Michael, thanks for the guiding video. I've eagerly tried to make a first test of a 12 frame animation sequence that has a 4x5 aspect ratio, but the tif file image generated is really long and horizontally stretched. This also happens when I run the test file the program comes with. Any clue what may be going on here? Thanks
Hi Michael, thanks for the video. Can you give me some advice for avoid the ghosting? Im using 50 lpi, after calibration (49,7) and perfect positioning the lenticular sheet i still seeing a little bit of ghosting, any advice?? Thank you so much!!
The ghosting is very dependent on the art and the LPI. I have images that work fine on 40LPI, that show ghosting on 50LPI. Try to avoid areas of flat color, especially yellow. Use pictures with lots of mid tones, nothing too dark or light.