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(IF THE PAGE DOES NOT APPEAR TO DISPLAY PROPERLY, IT MAY NEED RELOADING)publications, and in film. Alas, these special images have, by-in-large, never been truly \"seen\" by the modern day public in the you, the modern-day public, images of the American Civil War, that can again be truly experienced as they were intended to be
\"stereograph\", or \"stereoview.\"It is a little known fact that nearly 70% of all Civil War documentary photography was in 3-D, underscoring the hand-held device called a \"stereoscope\" (gallery photo). America clamored for the images. Millions were produced!
CIVIL WAR STEREOVIEW WINDOW™ is a collection of over 650 stereo anaglyphs on a data DVD, in the lossless \"PNG\" format.
A handful were developed from stereo prints. These images are the very same views that were taken under difficult and sometimes
such as folio prints, stereoviews, card photographs of various sizes and lantern slides, to name but a few.Note: The collection is not a \"movie\", but is comprised of 3-D anaglyphs made from digital scans of primary source material.
Negative: June 1862. Capt. James M. Robertson with 3 section chiefs near Seven Pines (see gallery photo).A careful process of digital repair and restoration was undertaken due to the damage that occurred to the negatives after
in order to reduce artifacts, preserve crispness, maintain overall quality and generally prevent the kind of degradation
and illuminating examination of the subject matter. Descriptive captions expand upon the archive titles, and reflect the latest
are included in the captions.Of special note is the inclusion of a number of rare stereoviews from the Robin Stanford Collection at the Library of Congress,
which depict prewar scenes of slaves and plantation slave life!While so-called \"combat action\" photos would still be decades away, these compelling images nevertheless faithfully portray,
and equipment, forts and fortifications, officers, laborers, soldiers and civilians of the Civil War. You\'ll travel to the battlefields experienced by millions of Americans over a century and a half ago. As described by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, physician, poetbefore the true placement of all of the elements within a scene and be wondrously transported INSIDE the actual scene, giving
are patiently waiting, inviting us to explore, to examine, to imagine. You\'ll be there for an experience you won\'t soon forget.The American Civil War was the first and only war ever to be fully documented with stereo photography. This both fascinated and
horrified an eager public. Upon viewing photographer Mathew Brady\'s shocking \"Antietam\" series, a New York Times reporter on
\"Mr. Brady has done something to bring home to us the terrible reality and earnestness of war. If he has not brought enabled browsers. The pages have been tested in Firefox, Chrome, Opera, Safari, Internet Explorer iOS and Android browsers.
(Additional anaglyph glasses should be purchased separately, from American Paper Optics)IMPORTANT!!
YOUR BROWSER MUST SUPPORT \"PNG\" IMAGES IN ORDER TO VIEW THEM IN CIVIL WAR STEREOVIEW WINDOW™.
Most, if not all modern browsers do. To verify, google \"PNG\" image. If you can see the images, you\'re good to go.TO PREVIEW THE ANAGLYPH EXAMPLES BELOW you\'ll need a pair of anaglyph glasses.
Note: While gallery photo examples are necessarily in the \"JPG\" format, the collection\'s stereo anaglyphs are preserved
in the lossless, \"PNG\" format and are crystal clearand cyan-right-eye). The anaglyphs are made up of two superimposed, color layers, one for each eye, but offset with respect
visual cortex fuses into the original, 3-dimensional scene.
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