Okay, thanks. I think I might try the all-red/green approach with one
image, and leave the rest of the poster as normal.

James 

On Wed, 2006-01-11 at 17:18 -0500, Peter Adrian Meyer wrote:
> As far as I know, there isn't currently a way to do this within pymol.  It
> does seem like an interesting idea though.
> 
> For a poster, you'd probably have to go with the two-color stereo scheme,
> which would mean losing color depth (as far as I know).  You could try
> generating the initial image with cross-eye (or wall-eye) stereo mode,
> splitting the two sides (one image for each eye), processing the two
> images (change from rbg color to all-red or all-green), and then recombine
> the two images.  You'd also need to be able to find the appropriate stereo
> glasses (or stuff to make them, which should be pretty cheap if they could
> be located).
> 
> I don't know how good the final result would look, but it should be possible.
> 
> If you're going try this, I'd recommend using imagemagick or the python
> imaging library to do the various image processing (after pymol), but
> there may be other software you're more comfortable with; or for that
> matter an easier approach.
> 
> Good luck,
> 
> Pete
> 
> > Is it possible to make a 2D image in pymol that can be used with 3D
> > glasses, the kind you used to get with really bad movies? Or is there a
> > way to do this with standard images generated in pymol? I'd like to add
> > these kinds of images to a poster so that people normally uninterested
> > in structural biology will at least show a superficial interest - "look
> > at the pretty pictures!"
> >
> >
> > --
> > James Knight <knight...@gmail.com>
> 
> 
> Pete Meyer
> Fu Lab
> BMCB grad student
> Cornell University
> 
-- 
James Knight <knight...@gmail.com>


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