Nishika N8000 Operations Instructions Page 17

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Your
Nishika
N8000 3-D camera
repre-
sents
the
state of
the art
in home 3-D
photog-
raphy,
giving
you
photos
that exhibit
extraor-
dinary
depth
and
realism.
The
suggestions
in
this section
will
enab,le
you
to
make the
best
use
of
your
camera,
and
take
the
most
effective
3-D
photographs
possible.
Overview
The 3-D effect
of
Nishika
photographs
occurs
whenever an
object
at one
distance
from the
camera
visually overlaps
another
object
at a
different
distance.
The
most
ef-
fective 3-D
photos
have
overlapping
objects
in
the
foreground,
midground and
back-
ground
of the
composition.
When
your
Nishika
3-D
photos
are
processed,
a
"key
(main)
subject"
must
be
selected
by
the
printing
technician.
This
key
subject
will
be the
focal
point
of
the
photo-
graph,
and
objects
that
share
its
distance
from the camera
will
exhibit
the
most clarity.
Objects
either
tar in
front
or
far
behind
the
key subject
may
be slightly
less
sharp.
Several
guidelines
are used
by
Nishika
technicians
to
determine
the
key
subject
of
a
3-D
photo.
lf
there
is
only
one
person
in
the
picture,
that
person
will
be chosen
as
the
key
subject.
lf
there
are
two
people
at
dif-
ferent distances
from the
camera,
the
key
subject
will
be the
closer
person.
In
photos
where there are
more
than
two
people
at dif-
ferent
distances
from the camera,
the
key
subject
will be the
person
most centrally
lo-
cated
in
the
midrange of the
composition.
Finally,
for
photos
without
people,
the
key
subject
will
be the
main subject
as deter-
mined by the
technician,
and
will
usually
be
centrally
located
in
the
midrange of the
com-
position.
The following
guidelines
will help
you
take
maximum advantage
of the
3-D
poten-
tial
of the
Nishika system.
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