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“My only image of the Grand Canyon was from the View-Master.” The iconic reels of tourist attractions, often packaged with a clunky plastic viewer and first sold to promote 3-D ...
The original View-Master dates back to the 1939 New York World's Fair. As many will fondly recall, the handheld 3-D viewer works with custom cardboard "reels" containing small color slides.
The View-Master reel shown off at the show, 'Escape the Labyrinth,' also comes with a special kit containing all manner of decoding devices, including a code wheel and a pair of 3D glasses.
To "view" a View-Master reel – like the "reels" you remember from the original View-Master, you'll need only your smartphone. To view these reels correctly, you'll need a Google Cardboard ...
Based on Google’s Cardboard VR viewer, the new View-Master is made of plastic and will sell for $29.99 when it hits shelves this fall. One “reel” of content is included with the device and ...
Former Daily Show and current Colbert Report writer Eric Drysdale has created The Man with F.E.E.E.T., a “set of 3 View-Master reels with 21 photographs in eye-popping 3D, accompanied by a 12 ...
"My only image of the Grand Canyon was from the View-Master." The iconic reels of tourist attractions, often packaged with a clunky plastic viewer and first sold to promote 3-D photography ...
Yes, via a View-Master-like device which you can buy online alongside the photo reels. The idea for Reelagram comes from Darren Marshall, a designer and co-founder of Doejo, a 30-person digital ...
The only difference to modern VR headsets is that instead of LCDs, the View-Master is fitted with exchangeable “reels” of small, slide-like stereoscopic images, giving the user a life-like ...