Howard, for this kind of stuff I use a program called "Photostudio 2000". It's actually at least eight or nine years old by now, and is a kind of "Photoshop-lite". But I do essentially what you described- I resize and create a new file that contains both images side-by-side. If the crossed-eyes method seems uncomfortable and forced, give it time, and experiment with viewing distance. I just re-sized the footpad shots to about 8" x 8" each , and it is most comfortable to view at about 30" from my face at this size. The further from your face, the less drastically you have to cross your eyes. My government-issue stereo viewer actually requires small prints- I see much finer detail by using crossed-eyes and large prints. On Mon, May 26, 2008 at 3:08 PM, Howard Jackman <sumoetx@yahoo.com> wrote:
Chuck is their a particular computer program you use to view these on the monitor? I've had a tough time getting them to remain large and side by side, without having to do a whole cut and paste and resize in photoshop. I'll have to google "stereo viewer" and see if anything comes up.