Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Development of Three-dimensional Panoramic Stereo Painting

Development of Three-dimensional Panoramic Stereo Painting

The concept of three-dimensional was born in 1838 Victorian England. Charles Wheatstone, a British physicist, first gave a speech on the principle of binocular stereo imaging at the Royal College. 12 years later, the Scotsman David Brewster invented the first stereo finder used in the field of photography, which was called "lens stereoscope". Since then, stereoscopic photography was born. In the mid-20th century, three-dimensional movies came out.

In 1970s and 1980s, the black-and-white stereoscopic film The Adventure of the Magician, starring Peisi Chen's father Chen Qiang, was filmed in China for several years. At that time, it was very interesting for people to watch movies with glasses. After entering the 2 1 century, liquid crystal stereoscopic displays, color stereoscopic movies and stereoscopic televisions have emerged one after another. You can see many three-dimensional sci-fi movies in the Children's Palace all over the country. The use of optical materials to make three-dimensional paintings originated abroad, and the exact historical date cannot be verified. Foreign optical materials are very stable. Three-dimensional printed postcards appeared in China 30 years ago. Making large-scale pictures with optical materials began in 1998.