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About stereo graphic optics:

 

Techniques for viewing stereoscopic 3d images are central to the activities of stereo graphic optics.  Stereo graphics are drawings, photographs or computer generated images that present a left eye view and a right eye view. The optics part is the visual system by which the stereo graphics are presented for the experience of stereoscopic depth.

Teacher, photographer, and publisher, Stuart Stiles provides the local services for exhibits, classes, and workshops in stereo arts relative to the stereo graphic optics. 

Regional, national, and international organizations that afford opportunities to attend events with other stereo enthusiasts are identified and their web sites are linked from this web site.

Resources for collectors, hobbyists, and anyone who would like to start to work with stereo images are made available here. 

 Contact Stereo Graphic Optics by clicking here. 

 
Links to stereoscopic events and organizations.

New York Stereoscopic Society  http://www.ny3d.org/#

National Stereoscopic Association   http://www.stereoview.org/ 

New York Public Library..Dennis Collection of American stereoview cards on-line http://digital.nypl.org/stereoviews/

IMAX at Palisades Center  http://www.imax.com/palisades/index.htm.

Johnson-Shaw Stereoscopic Museum, Meadville, PA   http:www.johnsonshawmuseum.org/

3D Center of Art & Photography http://www.3dcenter.us

 

About Prof. Stuart Stiles

 After a career of thirty three years in the psychology faculty at Orange County Community College, Stuart retired in 1999.  He is using part of his time to participate in the regional, national and international stereoscopic community. 

 

 


 

   

 While at the College, he organized class related projects for students that acquainted them with stereo photography, techniques for viewing 3D images and depth perception as they prepared for public exhibits of their projects.  Exhibits were often accompanied by visits from highly respected stereographers and stereo specialists such as William Duggan, Simon Bell, Jon Golden, Marc Grossman, Greg Dinkins, and Sheldon Aronowitz.

 

 


 

After retiring from the college, Stuart established Stiles Studio.  In part of his work with the stereo photography studio, he led workshops for children in the SMArt Links and Interactive Museum in Middletown. He led summer workshops for children at the historic Huguenot Street museum in New Paltz. Children were taught how to make their own stereo cameras, take stereo photos, and mount those photos for viewing in 3D.

For another age group at the college, he taught ENCORE courses on stereoviewing.  The courses ranged from Victorian stereo viewing to the big screen IMAX movies.

 

 


 

   

             

He provided Victorian Day exhibits of stereoscopes at the Saratoga County Brookside Museum in Ballston Spa, NY. 

 

Stuart published Stereoscopic Saratoga Springs: approaching and entering the twentieth century, a collection featuring sixty two antique stereoviews of Victorian Saratoga Springs, NY.

 He designed a folding stereo viewer to be used with this book.  


Converting the old Saratoga stereo cards into slides for projection, he took an expanded version of the book's coverage to present slide shows at the National Stereoscopic Association, the New York Stereoscopic Society and the 2001 Display Expo convention in Saratoga Springs.

 


 

Working with the late Guenther Bauer and his wife Lois, Stuart published a set of Adirondack stereo views made in the 1870s by Seneca Ray Stoddard. That publication led to a set of Seneca Ray Stoddard's stereo photography as projection slides that has been shown at stereo organizations and as part of the Lake Placid North Elba Historical Society’s public presentations. 

 


 

 Stuart is an occasional contributor of articles to STEREO WORLD magazine, a publication of the National Stereoscopic Association. 

 


 

He has recently placed a Lyceum cultural program exhibit “Stereoscopic 3D: Photography with the depth of normal vision” in the Orange Hall Gallery at Orange County Community College.  Now that the exhibit closed on September 25, 2009, it is available for other venues. To arrange for a scheduling of the exhibit, click on this text.

A visitor at the Lyceum exhibit views some of the  stereo photos of Niagara Falls, NY made by local photographers during the Victorian era. 

 


 

 

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