Spanish Fork Canyon... looking at the Red Narrows
39.998904,-111.407504
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Spanish Fork Canyon... looking at the Red Narrows
39.998904,-111.407504
Is that called Horse Canyon?
Okay, I cheated again and figured it out from your linked photo. Not gonna say anything but I will say that I don't think ANYONE here will be guessing that one right.
Is it in Utah?
I'm probably wrong, but tempted to say somewhere around the upper Provo River (Highway 150/Mirror Lake Highway). The rock looks similar, but I've never looked under a bridge there. The road looks too narrow too.
Thowing an idea out- City Creek Canyon above Salt Lake.
I'm surprised the only guess is Mirror Lake Hwy, so why not start guessing?
wrong state.. think north
Is this in Yellowstone?
more hints?
I know who AND where it is! It's ME and ...well, I guess it's not fair for me to answer the other question.
Hello everyone. I hope you don't mind the intrusion; I've been lurking on this great thread for a week or so.
How about Baring Creek Bridge, Going to the Sun Road, Glacier National Park?
me thinks dark is right :nod:
Woot!
I've actually never been to Glacier. I have read about it, though, and the remarkable road going through it. The width of the roadway, and the stonework, made me suppose that it might be Going to the Sun Road. The "north" clue helped, too. A little googling, and voila!
OK, this is a stereo pair. If you can cross your eyes and make the images merge, the 3D will pop out.
Fiery Furnace
Yes, very good. Question is, is that specific enough? Opinions, folks?
people have won with less. :lol8:
I could not pinpoint an exact location within. depending on camera angles, you could make literally dozens of places look similar.
It's Krill Canyon. Your turn, #7.
Was anyone able to get the 3D effect to work?
Try this
It works by presenting your left eye with the scene the left eye originally saw, and your right eye with the scene the right eye originally saw. The two images are a little bit different--created by holding the camera off to the left a bit and snapping the picture, then moving it to the right, centering on the same spot as the first, and taking another picture. Centering exactly isn't really critical, nor is how far apart the two camera positions are. It is important that the two images aren't tilted with respect to each other, though (but even that can be corrected with software).
Since there are a few seconds of time separation between the shots, if anything is moving in the scene, including clouds, ripples of water, or windblown grass, the result will look odd. There are 3D cameras that take both images at the same time, or rigs that mount two cameras for doing so...in that case, scenes with movement come out OK.