Handmade holograms are really weird

2023 ж. 19 Ақп.
2 361 917 Рет қаралды

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You can make holograms just by etching lines into a shiny surface. All you need is a compass with two points (a divider). And to be able to get your head around the mind bending geometry.
If you're thinking of making your own and would like to share it. Here's a link to my Discord:
/ discord
Then head over to the #science-fair-project channel
You can find Matthew Brand's holograms and his other stuff here:
zintaglio.com
William J. Beaty's instructions for making holograms is here:
amasci.com/amateur/holohint.ht...
And his youtube channel is here:
/ @wbeaty
You can buy my books here:
stevemould.com/books
You can support me on Patreon and get access to the exclusive Discord:
/ stevemould
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Пікірлер
  • At no point did I mention that the light source needs to be small and bright. Which is strange because the light source needs to be small and bright. The sponsor is Incogni: The first 100 people to use code SCIENCE at the link below will get 20% off: incogni.com/science

    @SteveMould@SteveMould Жыл бұрын
    • ah

      @spidunno@spidunno Жыл бұрын
    • whats it like just experimenting and having fun for a living and having a loving family?

      @username4441@username4441 Жыл бұрын
    • Nice deceptive thumbnail

      @vaibhavbv3409@vaibhavbv3409 Жыл бұрын
    • to i? did you mean do i it appears to be fixed now.

      @rocketboysmc@rocketboysmc Жыл бұрын
    • I couldn't find the links in the description 😕

      @rand0mc1tyz3n8@rand0mc1tyz3n8 Жыл бұрын
  • That opaque square was trippy. I'm sure I've seen holograms that do the same effect, but this was on another level

    @JollyTurbo1@JollyTurbo1 Жыл бұрын
    • yea that worked surprisingly well

      @SpydersByte@SpydersByte Жыл бұрын
    • The fact it was done by hand is just mindblowing

      @chrisd1746@chrisd1746 Жыл бұрын
    • Which opaque square?

      @Flopsaurus@Flopsaurus Жыл бұрын
    • @@Flopsaurus the one with the S behind it

      @SpydersByte@SpydersByte Жыл бұрын
    • If all the objects are made by scratches, how does one object hide another one?

      @richardmellish2371@richardmellish2371 Жыл бұрын
  • As a kid in school back in the 70s one of the other kid's brought his mom for show and tell. She worked at a tech company, i think HP, and she brought in a few holograms she made with a laser on large sheets of acetate. I recall examining them closer and noticing they had all these swirling textures to them up close. Amazing to finally have the answer to a question in the back of the mind answered over 40 years later!

    @rich9965@rich9965 Жыл бұрын
    • Never thought to ask ur mom?

      @minx8334@minx8334 Жыл бұрын
    • Deep cut memory. Love solving those deep seeded mysteries. We need a word for nostalgic mystery solutions.

      @rhettlee@rhettlee10 ай бұрын
    • Laser etched holograms are not colorful on pupose. They use two physical effects: light interference and fine grating diffraction. The point is to etch a reflective (or absorbitive) surface with points that will interfere in our eyes so each eye sees the same image, but "dislocated" by the 4cm each of our eyes are separated.

      @danielkoga9937@danielkoga99376 ай бұрын
    • He's doing God's work!

      @thephoenixsystem6765@thephoenixsystem67656 ай бұрын
  • Finally a piece of content that actually uses the cross-eyed stereogram. It has always felt useless, aside from solving ‘find the difference’ challenges, but now I’ve finally used it again haha

    @BestCrafting@BestCrafting Жыл бұрын
    • OMG I'm not the only one that used this trick to slove the 'find the difference'. It really messes with people who don't know how you did it :)

      @mikeuk1927@mikeuk1927 Жыл бұрын
    • It's really extremely effective for that. I also used it a while back to find differences between a bunch of text in Word documents, but my head did hurt for a while after that

      @NickiRusin@NickiRusin Жыл бұрын
    • I never thought about using them in those challenges. Thanks!

      @eugenetswong@eugenetswong Жыл бұрын
    • I put a stereogram on the back of one of my books I publishes. I doubt that anyone else even figured it out, let alone appreciated it, but I love it.

      @thewiseturtle@thewiseturtle Жыл бұрын
    • @@thewiseturtle I'm sure someone like vsauce down the line will eventually find what you did and be like "this person was cool"

      @richardpike8748@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember reading about this technique in a science magazine 20+ years ago. The author of that article mentioned seeing this effect in the paint of a black car where a hand print seemed to be floating where the same hand had wiped the surface with a cloth but from two elbow pivot points.

    @gingermany6223@gingermany6223 Жыл бұрын
    • Same, I think I read about it in a science magazine from the 80s or even older.

      @hakajiru264@hakajiru264 Жыл бұрын
    • I read that article, too! I think I still have the hologram I made years ago on a CD cover using this technique...

      @walterriblethegreat@walterriblethegreat Жыл бұрын
    • I'm pretty sure that's Beaty that I mention in the video. He talks about a floating hand print somewhere on his website.

      @SteveMould@SteveMould Жыл бұрын
    • @@walterriblethegreat i tried it on a cd as well when I was a kid but my compass sucked and the hologram was pretty weak but still cool.

      @statusquofugitive8554@statusquofugitive8554 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@hakajiru264a

      @mathematicalsarthak@mathematicalsarthak Жыл бұрын
  • Sitting here cross eyed watching holograms and then AHHH two Steves!

    @0FG0@0FG0 Жыл бұрын
    • lol sameeeee

      @n16161@n161619 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂 Yes! That was a funny moment

      @saemstunes@saemstunes8 ай бұрын
    • He forgot to change his Minecraft skin

      @akiradkcn@akiradkcn2 ай бұрын
    • I developped VR app for training crossed eyes for myself

      @DontMansion@DontMansionАй бұрын
  • I'm blind in my right eye so when you started talking about the glint in a dirty windshield or the pot lid looking further away at certain points my mind was blown. I've never experienced that and never expected it was such a different experience for people with both eyes. It's always just been a glare to me. A smear. Never thought anything of it at all. I don't usually think much of being blind in one eye as it's all I've known but sometimes I get sad there's stuff I can't experience no matter what I do.

    @fideliareeve3493@fideliareeve3493 Жыл бұрын
    • My mum's blind in her right eye as well. She calls us weird when we talk about seeing two fingers when you hold one up close in front of your face lol. For a few years I've really wanted to find a solution for people who are blind in one eye to be able to experience 3D sight. I keep wondering whether it might be possible for your brain to interpret overlapping images from one eye as 3D if those overlapping images were adjusted for where you were looking. One day I'll try it out. It would be difficult, however, because you'd need accurate eye tracking and very low response times. On the other hand, if it worked it might make returning to regular monocular vision seem really boring and flat, so there's the potential for making things worse haha. On another note, it only recently occurred to me why mum doesn't find reflections in the TV nearly as annoying as we kids do. Because of course, with binocular vision, we get the impression of the reflection being further away/not on the same plane as the TV screen. Worse, each eye sees a different image, which makes the image tend to "shimmer" and be even more annoying. It's the same effect when I'm trying to look at something up close that's reflective. I have to close one eye to get a clear image because each eye sees a different image and it's impossible to see anything clearly.

      @clonkex@clonkex Жыл бұрын
    • To be honest, I've never really paid attention to it. I think it's probably one of those things you get used to almost immediately unless you're actually looking for it.

      @chaos.corner@chaos.corner Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@chaos.corner yup, same

      @Ramdapanda@Ramdapanda Жыл бұрын
    • @@clonkex Probably easiest would be to try this with a VR headset, somehow superimposing the images intended for each of the eyes to both just hit one eye

      @doctorpc1531@doctorpc1531 Жыл бұрын
    • @@doctorpc1531 Yep, that was a thought I had, but I don't currently own any VR headsets with built-in eye tracking and I wasn't confident enough with the idea to spend money on an eye-tracking addon. Plus I already have enough uncompleted projects to last me a lifetime lol

      @clonkex@clonkex Жыл бұрын
  • I did this on a school metal toilet paper holder like 5 years ago. (For reference I have lots of experience making this kind of art) I put my name on it like an idiot. When I inevitably got called down to the principals office he wasn’t even mad about it he was just curious how I did it. So I showed him and after he asked me to make something for the school art show. I was given sheet metal from the shop class and I carved the schools logo into it. It wasn’t my greatest work, but for me at the time it was really good. I added my signature behind the logo so you could only see it from a specific angle. Also if you vary the line angles of different objects you can create 3d images with foregrounds and backgrounds. This is my favorite kind of art as you can create a 3D landscape in a 2d sheet. I also have messed with adding some color into the scratches on the surface of the image to give objects different colors.

    @Xaddre@Xaddre29 күн бұрын
    • Easily the most impressive thing I've ever heard. By far the best😁

      @tenaciousstudios03051@tenaciousstudios0305116 күн бұрын
  • Never had good luck with the stereograms. Monocular vision really screws with that! But those holograms are FASCINATING! Just scratches and shiny, who knew!?

    @nenelan@nenelan Жыл бұрын
    • same. it just doesnt work for me no matter how hard i try

      @bermchasin@bermchasin Жыл бұрын
    • @@bermchasin I have to force myself to pick which eye to focus from. Optometrists my whole life have not really been able to offer much in way of assistance. Lasik they said would not take care of it, and a 2-3 year patch over the stronger one MAY help the other compensate. But, not worth the headache.

      @nenelan@nenelan Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@nenelan wait, does that effect depth perception, if you can only be effectively using one eye at a time?

      @zackbuildit88@zackbuildit88 Жыл бұрын
    • @@zackbuildit88 Correct! I have none. Sports in school was always a challenge.

      @nenelan@nenelan Жыл бұрын
    • @nenelan I'm the same. I've had monocular vision for as long as I can remember, I went through years of specialists when I was younger and I did the patch which did nothing. Lasik was one of the best things I've ever done, but that was probably more because I had 2 different focal strengths (I was born short sighted in one eye and long sighted in the other). I have "trained" myself to have depth perception by using my environment and referencing known lengths of different objects, but in open spaces it all goes - best example was when I saw the grand canyon and it looked like a flat painting

      @brown297@brown297 Жыл бұрын
  • This makes me incredibly tempted to write some software to generate a CNC path that makes these. *Edit:* Not 30 seconds after I posted this, you explain that's exactly how the professional one was made. :joy:

    @JamesTM@JamesTM Жыл бұрын
    • engineering minds think alike :P

      @richardpike8748@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha, I just had the same thought exactly, or rather on how to build the CNC machine.

      @Topy44@Topy44 Жыл бұрын
    • Once the software is created, would it be expensive to generate the etchings? I was wondering if they offer any for sale, but it doesn't look like it.

      @aaa303@aaa303 Жыл бұрын
    • @@aaa303 Depends a lot on how much big acrylic sheets like that costs, and the time spent on logistics of buying material, manufacturing and selling. So in short, 'maybe'

      @Koushakur@Koushakur Жыл бұрын
    • @@aaa303 If such software for generating G-code for something like this existed, I would totally convert my 3D printer to have a knife or some sort of etching tooltip instead of a nozzle to make something. I hope James or someone actually makes software for this that is publicly available.

      @pchris@pchris Жыл бұрын
  • As soon as I saw the thumbnail and title I thought “Bill Beaty described this on his amateur science web site.” Glad he got a mention! Very nice explanation in this video.

    @jt12blk@jt12blk Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much for the cross-eyed 3d images, they were wonderful! I usually use this technique when photographing scenery or objects where seeing the actual depth makes a difference.

    @georgH@georgH Жыл бұрын
    • I did not know that was a thing, I'm astonished right now

      @DaedalusCommunity@DaedalusCommunity Жыл бұрын
    • @@DaedalusCommunity takes a bit to learn, but it's rewarding once you got it down.

      @oezzimix@oezzimix Жыл бұрын
    • @@oezzimix for me it sort of clicked instantly, i crossed my eyes and they immediately locked on the picture, blew my mind

      @DaedalusCommunity@DaedalusCommunity Жыл бұрын
    • @@DaedalusCommunity nice!

      @oezzimix@oezzimix Жыл бұрын
    • I have never been able to make the cross-eyed 3d thing work for more than a split second until this video. For some reason, i was finally able to hold focus on the “center” image. Every other time it would pull out of focus, but for the first time it just snapped in and i could see it without straining. Thanks Steve!

      @batgwill@batgwill Жыл бұрын
  • This is how snow, or an icy road, sparkles: you get reflections off different ice crystals that your eyes interpret as matching, so your brain thinks there's tiny random sparkles of light at various distances including inside the surface of the snow/road/whatever.

    @PhilBoswell@PhilBoswell Жыл бұрын
    • There's glass in some pavements.

      @jakefriesenjake@jakefriesenjake Жыл бұрын
    • Similarly the reason cat eyes look surreal at night - the cat's two eyes reflect the light source slightly differently back to your two eyes, causing a scintillating 3D effect which tricks your brain that the glowing eyes are almost hovering in front of the cat's face.

      @plixplop@plixplop Жыл бұрын
  • I noticed this same sort of effect on scratched shiny surfaces like a car or counter. There are tones of random scrapes in all directions, but when light is shining on it the scrapes appear to be in a circular pattern around the light. It’s a really cool phenomenon and I never new you could do so much with it

    @JosephsDesign@JosephsDesign Жыл бұрын
  • I just tried it on an old CD "jewel box" case and it works! Amazing! So easy, yet so fascinating!!

    @BryanWLepore@BryanWLepore Жыл бұрын
    • Great hobby with the kids, ey!

      @scififan698@scififan698 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for this! I'd heard several times that if you break a holographic plate in two, both halves will still have the complete image, just limited by viewing angle. I've been researching how holograms work, trying to wrap my head around how this could possibly be true. Watching this video (and comparing it to the shine lines you see on a windshield or a pot lid) finally gave me an idea about how that might work.

    @Krail1@Krail1 Жыл бұрын
    • I don't know if this helps or makes it more confusing but one way to think about it is to compare it to looking through a window. If you cover most of the window leaving just a small hole to look through, you can still see the whole scene outside if you get up close to the opening and look through it at different angles.

      @Quantris@Quantris10 ай бұрын
    • @@Quantris Yeah, I'd heard that idea before, but it didn't really help me wrap my head around things. Like, the light from a window is all coming from somewhere else, and that doesn't help me conceive of how an entire scene can be recorded on every point of a surface. I guess it helps visualize a little bit how it's really just one very specific angle of said scene on each point.

      @Krail1@Krail110 ай бұрын
  • Really enjoying the cross eyed stereogram and then without warning…two Steves appear! Some things in the universe shouldn’t happen 😉🤣 Great video as always, thank you 👍 I have always found holograms, or light refraction and reflection, fascinating. Could be my autistic traits showing through

    @smilerbob@smilerbob Жыл бұрын
    • It would be good if there was a video with just the cross eyed stereogram bits.

      @benwisey@benwisey Жыл бұрын
    • or perhaps a quantum superposition of one Steve in two places

      @neopalm2050@neopalm2050 Жыл бұрын
    • @@neopalm2050 In which case Steve wasn't anywhere while he was making the video 😉

      @smilerbob@smilerbob Жыл бұрын
    • Me too, I like these 3d videos.

      @cyanoure@cyanoure Жыл бұрын
    • No, it's not your "autistic trait," silly. Many people find this fascinating whether they have autism or not.

      @scootermom1791@scootermom1791 Жыл бұрын
  • Very cool idea to show the 3d-ness via stereogram 🙂 loving the content!

    @alzandermuller@alzandermuller Жыл бұрын
    • @@chuharry5360 perhaps obvious but way underutilised

      @deadfishyarou@deadfishyarou Жыл бұрын
    • @@deadfishyarou if it were that obvious, everyone would use it 😂 Definitely underutilized though

      @alzandermuller@alzandermuller Жыл бұрын
  • The Visa Dove is not an etched hologram. That was created using a model and a holographic camera. The dove was scupted in clay and cast in plaster or epoxy. I know this because my father was the sculptor who made the dove for Visa. He was one of the top sculptors working during the hologram craze of the 80s and 90s and worked for such companies as Kenner/Hasbro, Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Lucasfilm, Mattel, the NFL, American Bank Note, the Danbury Mint, etc.

    @samdann5366@samdann53667 ай бұрын
    • The Visa Dove IS an etched hologram, a "surface hologram," composed of hundreds of thousands of microscopic reflective lines. But the lines are produced via optical interference, not by abrasion. The Viza dove is a Benton white-light hologram. These scratch-holograms are also Benton white-light holograms. The physics is the same for both, and that's the key to understanding them. In 1994, I originally invented these when I realized that, since Benton holograms are frequency-independent, this requires that the fringes in the Gabor zoneplate be size-independent. The fringe-spacing is irrelevant, and plays no role in 3D image-reconstruction. Therefore, we can draw real holograms by hand, with a sharp needle, but only if the holograms are of the Benton type, featuring only horizontal parallax. In a Benton "rainbow" hologram, if we increase the fringe-spacing to millimeters rather than microns, the hologram still keeps working, although it does lose the rainbow-banding artifact. Or said differently, the Viza Dove is an example of producing the tiny reflective lines of a "scratch hologram" by optical methods, rather than by surface-abrasion.

      @wbeaty@wbeaty3 ай бұрын
    • @wbeaty *Visa. You invented Benton white-light holograms? Wow. So, as I stated above, it's not a hand etched hologram. If it were there would be no need for a physical 3D object. Why use an extra step with a physical object when a computer graphic or illustration could be used instead? A 3D object hand-sculpted by my father. He did 100s of them in the 80s and 90s. They were cast in epoxy and shaded by airbrush.

      @samdann5366@samdann53663 ай бұрын
  • My dad showed me how to do this when I was a kid in the 80s. He did some really freakin' cool ones. He tried to do laser holograms too, but he never got it working right.

    @NonEuclideanTacoCannon@NonEuclideanTacoCannon Жыл бұрын
    • You should try it out

      @darketsdort@darketsdort Жыл бұрын
  • Experimented with this for my science fair project back in high school in the 90's, and ended up getting to go to the international science fair! Very neat stuff, the CNC version is awesome.

    @BrianPletcher1@BrianPletcher1 Жыл бұрын
  • i figured there had to be a machine involved with those fancy ones. no way anybody turned that out with a hand held compass or something. you'd go insane

    @richard_d_bird@richard_d_bird Жыл бұрын
    • Probably laser etching

      @beratplaygame5349@beratplaygame5349 Жыл бұрын
    • @@beratplaygame5349 laser doesn't work, you need scratches with smooth rounded edges to create specular highlights.

      @MatthijsvanDuin@MatthijsvanDuin Жыл бұрын
    • ...except clickspring. He'd probably disappear for another year or so, then just post a video going "...I hand-filed these diamond needles I then used to scribe a 360 hologram of the Sydney opera house into this brass plate..."

      @AttilaAsztalos@AttilaAsztalos Жыл бұрын
    • It can the CNC'd. The point is it involves a complex transformation with a 3d file and it's views as input. And I think the video's autor lose it...

      @danielkoga9937@danielkoga99376 ай бұрын
  • I was literally about to say "Wouldn't it be mad if he gave some side by side footage so we could see it cross-eyed" and then you bloody did it, this is why I love your channel.

    @thedofflin@thedofflin Жыл бұрын
  • Not quite an interference pattern, but this does seem worthy of the "hologram" name - unlike all the Pepper's Ghost projections you see advertised as holograms. Love the way you can peek around the front etching!

    @simonabunker@simonabunker Жыл бұрын
  • Ladies and gentlemen, I think we might finally have a Parker cube.

    @lordofmorgul@lordofmorgul Жыл бұрын
    • It makes me so happy that you're proposing "parker cube" not "mould cube"

      @SteveMould@SteveMould Жыл бұрын
    • @@SteveMould even when it's not Parker's fault we all know deep down it's still Parker's fault

      @nahometesfay1112@nahometesfay1112 Жыл бұрын
    • @@SteveMould I wouldn't feel safe yet, "[insert name] tesseract" is still not taken.

      @lordofmorgul@lordofmorgul Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@nahometesfay1112 haha

      @carubylachhiramka6072@carubylachhiramka607210 ай бұрын
  • I can never see those cross-eyed stereograms, but I'm really good at the other kind where you de-focus your eyes until the images overlap. Thankfully that technique still works on the cross-eyed kind; it just ends up looking inside-out, with the "near" bits appearing "far" and vice-versa.

    @ReySilverskin@ReySilverskin Жыл бұрын
    • I defocussed my eyes for those etched stereograms. They still worked.

      @fredericapanon207@fredericapanon207 Жыл бұрын
    • It should be somewhat easier for cross-eyed, since with parallel stereograms there is a maximum separation possible (unless you are somehow able to point your eyes away from each other). Just look at your finger and bring it closer to you as you focus on it. Then do that same muscle movement without your finger. It's how to go cross-eyed.

      @nonwibb@nonwibb Жыл бұрын
    • WAIT. so the reason americans say to "go cross eyed" to see these is because YOU'RE ACTUALLY SUPPOSED TO?? Omg! I'm from Germany and the only ones I've ever encountered are the kind where you have to unfocus your eyes. It's always explained as "staring *through* the image" Watching this video i was kinda confused why it was harder to get the image to work than what I'm used to! Guess I'm rewinding and watching again, going actually cross eyed this time

      @throughcolouredglasses9300@throughcolouredglasses9300 Жыл бұрын
    • I think the people having trouble doing cross-eyed stereograms are just watching this on their phone, and when something is right in front of you its hard to do. And parallel view sterograms are impossible on a computer screen because it's too big.

      @nonwibb@nonwibb Жыл бұрын
    • @@nonwibb I have been able to point my eyes away from each other as long as I can remember. But I think I've only found how to make one of the move-eye-inwards-muscles relax. I essentially disable they autopilot for making my eyes a suitable distance from each other where I don't see double. So even though I can control my eyes pretty well, my manual controls are far from the accuracy we have evolved to use instinctively. This means that they keep moving ever so slightly towards/away from each other even when I try to keep them still using this method. (When I don't do anything they work like eyes would normally do.)

      @ruthrisberg4632@ruthrisberg4632 Жыл бұрын
  • This was actually really helpful for me as an artist to better understand how reflections work. Thank you :)

    @fatcat1414@fatcat1414 Жыл бұрын
  • Using stereograms in the video is such a cool idea! Sadly I can only do wall-eye ones, but it was still cool for the simpler ones- for me the smiley was just above the surface instead of below. Might take this as an opportunity to try one more time to learn to see cross-eye stereograms

    @ptarmigan1356@ptarmigan1356 Жыл бұрын
  • I really appreciate the cross eye stereographic 3D parts of the video! I would much enjoy if other creators did the same with things that depth would enhance. nice one!

    @kaigorsuch3586@kaigorsuch3586 Жыл бұрын
  • Glad you incorporated the cross view stuff. That’s the only way I can see 3D images but since more people are used to the magic eye way, it’s rare for people to do that.

    @heyspookyboogie644@heyspookyboogie644 Жыл бұрын
  • Something like this happened to us once - there was somehow a scratch in my dad's car that appeared to hover about an inch above the surface. It was very strange to look at

    @AndrewTaylorPhD@AndrewTaylorPhD Жыл бұрын
    • Sometimes you'll see this in car paint when someone wipes the dirty surface with a towel. The grit acts like fine sandpaper and creates a scratch hologram of the towel. If they have their hand flat on the towel the hologram will encode an image of the hand with scratches of different depths corresponding to areas of higher pressure, so you get a kind of grayscale image of the hand. I'd suppose it's possible to machine a hard surface with a depth map of an object, pour soft silicone onto it, then use the silicone cast with a fine abrasive to etch a hologram with a strong grayscale effect.

      @dave7038@dave7038 Жыл бұрын
  • 1:20 Ack! Two Steves!

    @PopeGoliath@PopeGoliath Жыл бұрын
  • Maybe a clear acrylic with a point of light shining down through it from the top would mitigate the distortion and also make a nice glowing hologram.

    @michaellabrador2549@michaellabrador2549 Жыл бұрын
  • Interestingly Steve, you mention how the side-by-side video clips work well when you go cross eyed, but I was curious how the clips would look when opened in VR. It looks STUNNING, and the illusion is far more clear and comprehendible than it is when just looking cross-eyed at a flat screen. And that got me thinking, you’ve made your fair share of stereographic clips across a few videos on your channel, have you ever thought about making an entire stereographic video intended for VR? Whether it’s something new and unique or just a compilation of all the clips you’ve made in the past, I’d be fascinated to see what you do with the technology

    @ODISeth@ODISeth Жыл бұрын
  • I have a Rush record with a rotating star along the edge of the vinyl and I was always mesmerized by it. Thank you for explaining how it worked

    @LilPeener@LilPeener Жыл бұрын
  • I absolutely love the crossed eyes stereoscopic images, it's so so so cool to see new ones!

    @LewLaps@LewLaps Жыл бұрын
  • You might also look into "anisotropic highlights" which is the general type of "light-perpendicular-to-a-tube-shape" based highlights we are seeing here.

    @plixplop@plixplop Жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating! I love crossing my eyes and watching videos. Congratulations on 2,000,000+ subs!

    @brianmckeever5280@brianmckeever5280 Жыл бұрын
  • Remarkably simple technique. Nice. Love the explainations about the process and what is happening to create the illusion.

    @UnrelatedAntonym@UnrelatedAntonym Жыл бұрын
  • oh man wbeaty is such a youtube throwback. used to watch his videos like almost 15 years ago! crazy.

    @Emariess@Emariess Жыл бұрын
    • Beaty's been in the biz longer than KZhead, his website blew my young mind two decades ago

      @RoyWiggins@RoyWiggins Жыл бұрын
    • @@RoyWiggins Someone discovered that Charles Wheatstone almost invented scratch-holograms. He was examining lathe-turned disks under candle light, noticed the 3D stripe, and it led him to invent stereo (first the hand-drawings, later photos and the stereopticon.) We almost had Victorian Steampunk holograms.

      @wbeaty@wbeaty Жыл бұрын
  • i found william beaty's page years and years ago, forgot about completely, saw the smiley face and immediately remembered it!

    @MrSupahlovah@MrSupahlovah Жыл бұрын
  • Awesomeness. I never knew it worked that way!

    @PosyMusic@PosyMusic Жыл бұрын
  • Your ability to explain this in a way that anyone can understand..all of your videos.. thank you. You have a gift.

    @jimmerseiber@jimmerseiber Жыл бұрын
  • Someone should make a program that gets an input of dots and generates a list of instructions on how to create a manual hologram that depicts those dots. Kind of tricky to define occlusion though.

    @allNicksAlreadyTaken@allNicksAlreadyTaken Жыл бұрын
    • It would take a very kind person to go to all that effort and release it for free. I'd be interested to buy it if someone does want to make it though! Or we could ask ChatGPT 👀

      @Joshuahuk@Joshuahuk Жыл бұрын
    • It just needs someone to make a crude attempt using popular coding tools and uploading to git hub and letting other random internet strangers slowly improve the code until it is as good as opensource 3D-printer slicer programs. I think a RepRap with a 500mW laser might be able to scribe these marks into a sheet of plastic.

      @KallePihlajasaari@KallePihlajasaari Жыл бұрын
  • Pair of compasses

    @richardh8082@richardh8082 Жыл бұрын
  • Such inspiring channels... all these math / science channels that show how things are made, what can be made, how it works, and the mathematics / patterns behind it all. Seems like infinite potential is right at our fingertips with such simple tools and materials.

    @nemesisurvivorleon@nemesisurvivorleon Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks so much for doing a _cross-eye_ stereogram! I see so many videos that swap the eyes so it works like a Magic Eye painting, and I just can't focus far enough "past" the monitor to get the images to converge. This way is much, much easier!

    @SpaghettyLuvsU@SpaghettyLuvsU4 ай бұрын
  • fun fact, etch holograms can be transferred to *chocolate* quite ok. You just need to make a negative out of a durable food safe material ;)

    @jnbsp3512@jnbsp3512 Жыл бұрын
    • If the groove is a smooth round bottom one then the inverse of it will be a smooth ridge, this will give a slightly BETTER result as the smooth curved potion is not recessed. However a raised surface is more vulnerable unlike a groove.

      @KallePihlajasaari@KallePihlajasaari Жыл бұрын
    • I wonder if you can stamp a CD out of chocolate

      @Gman556@Gman556 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Gman556 Hmm, Hypothetically possible but might not work with the regular master mould/stamper as this makes the pits into the BACK of the disk that are read THROUGH the plastic with the silvering (aluminium) on the stamped side that is then varnished for protection and to allow printing. For a chocolate disk you would have to use a unvarnished CD as a stamper and then aluminise the chocolate (might be tricky to reach adequate vacuum) and offset the disk so that the CD player would find the reading layer at approximately the right distance from the reading head. Protecting the delicate surface from dirt and scratches would make the disk very vulnerable.

      @KallePihlajasaari@KallePihlajasaari Жыл бұрын
  • Automating these with laser engravers or CNC machines should bring a whole new dimension to custom decorations. :)

    @MadScientist512@MadScientist512 Жыл бұрын
    • Depends on the material I think. It needs to be a clean scratch, and laser engravers vaporize plastic leaving a white line and CNC machines tend to be very rounded so it may work but I don't know for sure

      @sleuthelle@sleuthelle11 ай бұрын
  • i really love stereograms! Thanks for including them in this, it's always been something I could do since the MagicEye books in middle school.

    @LeeAnnC@LeeAnnC Жыл бұрын
  • Wow, this might be your most interesting video so far! Great stuff man!

    @scififan698@scififan698 Жыл бұрын
  • On the "damn I just don't know if any hobbyist can pull off that resolution" end, I bet a pattern could also be etched into a PCB. _Might_ be a pain to get that fine of a masking layer using any hobbyist processes, even before getting that perfect etching time comes into it.

    @StopChangingUsernamesYouTube@StopChangingUsernamesYouTube Жыл бұрын
  • You should use a Cricut to print the etching. That way you can use a digital design and make something complicated.

    @NorthOfEarthAlex@NorthOfEarthAlex Жыл бұрын
  • I had 4:19 happen to me once, although it was caused by ice that I suspect had kept getting frozen, defrosted and smoothed because I didn’t know how my defroster worked and it was extremely cold outside. It was gorgeous, every light source- tail lights, reflections, the moon- made this magnificent 3D arching into my view. It was dangerous to drive with, but I wish I could see it again. Thanks for highlighting that phenomenon

    @Prefesuersheen@Prefesuersheen Жыл бұрын
  • Fantastic! My years of struggling to look at "Magic Eye" posters in the early 2000s(?) has paid off - it only took a couple of seconds to see those images! Cheers, Steve!

    @ethzero@ethzero Жыл бұрын
  • I always look forward to these videos, they never disappoint.

    @jesseshort8@jesseshort8 Жыл бұрын
  • I wonder if you could do these on a vinyl cutter.

    @mikeselectricstuff@mikeselectricstuff Жыл бұрын
  • I saw this exact technique demonstrated on a website many many years ago but never got any results myself. Your explanation makes perfect sense of this.

    @nrdesign1991@nrdesign1991 Жыл бұрын
  • You can do this with color too. Use three transparent plates on top of a black backing. Etch each one wherever its color appears, and etch more deeply where it's stronger. Full color hologram.

    @williambarnes5023@williambarnes5023 Жыл бұрын
  • Bro, that stereoscopic effect was mad! It was legit real! Plus it looked way more HD as well! Please make more of these, that was so trippy dude 💪🤙🤙🤙

    @kapilbusawah7169@kapilbusawah7169 Жыл бұрын
  • I was thinking that for manual holograms with dividers you could plan a 3D image by printing out a sheet of paper for each arc radius, and setting the dividers correctly each time you followed a sheet. You'd need a way of registering them so they were in consistent positions - perhaps a peg system such as animators use when drawing by hand?

    @macronencer@macronencer Жыл бұрын
    • Nice idea

      @SteveMould@SteveMould Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing, and very clear explanation of how these holographs work 👍

    @Boslandschap1@Boslandschap1 Жыл бұрын
  • YES holography is so cool, i'm happy to see you make a vid on it! last year i had a lab where we made our own holograms with lasers and god it's such an awesome field

    @emolgana@emolgana Жыл бұрын
  • I want to make things now. What about the "traditional" hologram? How does it differ from what you're talking about here? Great stuff as always

    @TwoScoopsOfTubert@TwoScoopsOfTubert Жыл бұрын
    • Those go as far as making the light interfere at the level of the wavelength to make the hologram genuinely indistinguishable from if the actual thing were there. With these, your lenses still focus at the depth of the surface, even if your eye-seperation-based depth perception disagrees. With traditional holograms, even the lens you'd use to focus the image is the one for the image's depth rather than the surface's depth.

      @neopalm2050@neopalm2050 Жыл бұрын
    • the Thought Emporium made a video about making them, it works using laser interference on a piece of film when you make the film, you split one laser into two, send one into the film directly but reflect the other off the object, this exposes the film with an interference pattern, which is basically Interference = Clean laser - Object laser. When you want to look at the film, you shine the clean laser onto the film, and Clean - Interference = Object laser

      @1224chrisng@1224chrisng Жыл бұрын
    • @@neopalm2050 does this mean that this video's hologram is basically a fancy stereogram?

      @1224chrisng@1224chrisng Жыл бұрын
    • @@neopalm2050 Why does your lens still focus at the depth of the surface with these? Binocular vision depth-perception and focus depth-perception are both about parallax effects, it's just that binocular vision uses the distance between your eyes, and focus uses the distance between different sides of the pupil of one eye. Even with one eye closed you still perceive things from different viewpoints, those viewpoints are just close together as they are all within the one pupil.

      @barneylaurance1865@barneylaurance1865 Жыл бұрын
    • @@1224chrisng No. A stereogram is just two images, which need to be interpreted as a 3D thing by your eyes. A true hologram gives you an entire light field, which tells you everything that can be known about the light at the panel at which the hologram is displayed. As I said, you'd use lenses with different focal lengths for each case. Also, if you look at a stereogram from a different angle than the one you're supposed to, it will look distorted, while for a hologram, you have total control over the image at every angle (up to the diffraction limit (I think?)) if you can find a way to produce such a hologram. As for the things in this video? I'd put them somewhere between stereogram and hologram. They give about as much control over the image from a human standpoint as a hologram would, but they don't actually give a light field at all.

      @neopalm2050@neopalm2050 Жыл бұрын
  • I did guess that 08:45 that it was created automatically, by machine, because I could just imagine that if it was done by hand, the sheer number of "rage quitted" mistakes would really pile up.

    @dj1NM3@dj1NM3 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video as usual, Steve, always something thought provoking. But the first one where I was actually interested in the video sponsor, Great Segue there! You're getting really good at those :)

    @aivkara@aivkara Жыл бұрын
  • I really love you videos. Every time I see your smiling face I think "oh, something new and interresting is commin', that will make us better"

    @Captain_NeL@Captain_NeL Жыл бұрын
  • 8:45 Is the code for turning the 3D model (of blender) into CNC code (I guess gcode) publicly available?

    @FreshPe@FreshPe Жыл бұрын
  • I enjoyed the stereogram bit… but maybe next time, let us know when it’s about to end… it was slightly painful to have my focus changed so abruptly.

    @NitronF117@NitronF117 Жыл бұрын
    • liam get boo boo? need milky bottle?

      @username4441@username4441 Жыл бұрын
    • @@username4441 what is your goal here?

      @NitronF117@NitronF117 Жыл бұрын
    • @@NitronF117 don't bother. The commenter just wants attention. Ironic, right?

      @sandasturner9529@sandasturner9529 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sandasturner9529 It’s certainly possible. I try not to assume the intentions of others.

      @NitronF117@NitronF117 Жыл бұрын
    • @@NitronF117 It is odd that people complain about something that is inevitably going to happen. You are commenter number 3 out of 2000 to be upset but the abrupt end of the stereo portions. Others took it in their stride and laughed about how there were two faces to replace a stereo view or a scratch hologram. So perhaps User Name is a troll but in a sense you are too. If you practice with stereograms you get used to the non-standard eye movements and it is just one blink and you can reset to normal by looking at a familiar object. Try it again with this video if you want to practice. Offer the advice to others that are struggling.

      @KallePihlajasaari@KallePihlajasaari Жыл бұрын
  • As a car detailer this is a great explanation of what paint marring and damage is plus concealing the the paints true luster, gloss and deprh behind holograms.

    @olneydetail1487@olneydetail1487 Жыл бұрын
  • the fact you included the cross rye bits is so cool I think that technique should be more well known

    @thegrate1521@thegrate15218 ай бұрын
  • thxxx for your video!! I've just watched other's holographic work and been the principle of how it works, and your video solved my confusion🥹

    @saturn2040@saturn204010 ай бұрын
  • Finally, someone who shows 3D holograms in 3D instead of saying "It can't be captured on camera". I can see both, cross-eye and parallel view 3D, and if someone is new to this, then I would recommend to learn to view the parallel view format because for some reason the brain detects the parallel image bigger than the cross-eye image if viewed from the same distance.

    @U.S.A.@U.S.A. Жыл бұрын
  • I love the stereoscopic segments! I've been wondering why my video has been getting more views the past few days, I guess those were your patreons with early access to this video 😄

    @YPOC@YPOC Жыл бұрын
  • Wow thanks for the stereo images along the way. Really makes the point! Magic eye, indeed!

    @Thatdavemarsh@Thatdavemarsh Жыл бұрын
  • I remember finding Beaty's website many years ago, so cool to see this tech again!

    @bachaddict@bachaddict Жыл бұрын
  • The holograms look so amazing when you go crosseyed! I love those images where you can go into 'deeper' shapes by just somehow controlling your eyes to do so.

    @0ADVISOR0@0ADVISOR0 Жыл бұрын
    • Actually with regular stereograms, the trick is to diverge, not converge, but not everyone can diverge at will easily. The thing is: for convergence, the stereogram needs to be built with reversed depth, otherwise it's depth-axis inside-out.

      @scififan698@scififan698 Жыл бұрын
    • @@scififan698 there are parallel view stereograms and cross eyed stereograms. In parallel the left image is on the left and right on the right. In cross eyed on the other hand, the left image is on the right and right on the left. If you look at the wrong the depth is inverted. Just wanted to expand a little on what you wrote.

      @mikeuk1927@mikeuk1927 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mikeuk1927 yes, and for these 'parallel view' stereograms, I found that a lot of people can't pull it off, because diverging the eyes (looking far away, as opposed to the easier cross-eyed) seems to be harder to explain or execute. It is the more natural way though, because it corresponds to what we do when looking far away.

      @scififan698@scififan698 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes that's what I'm taking about, can you tell me where I could find those images?

      @0ADVISOR0@0ADVISOR0 Жыл бұрын
    • @cheesecake there's some good parallel view stuff here www.reddit.com/r/ParallelView

      @SteveMould@SteveMould Жыл бұрын
  • What are the dimensions of the etched grooves? I’m asking to see if I can 3D print them (with 4K resin printers)

    @rodrigoalvarez1712@rodrigoalvarez1712 Жыл бұрын
    • You can actually see the effect with any size groove (or mound/tube)! The layer lines may be an issue for 3D printing, but it should theoretically work. When I first learned about this technique years ago I considered making a large sculpture with polished wire to create a hologram, but the wires in front block the glint from the wires in the back. So you have either have consistency(very few wires) or resolution (lots of wires), but not both.

      @walterriblethegreat@walterriblethegreat Жыл бұрын
  • Feels like the kind of thing that could be well done with a X and Y axis frame like a 3D printer, but with a sharp point to scribe the pattern

    @Slash1066@Slash1066 Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing, I really learnt something to tinker around. Thank you Steve. I recommend your channel.

    @anandarunakumar6819@anandarunakumar6819 Жыл бұрын
  • I have to have one of those stereo-vision-3-D pictures a pretty exact distance from my face, and it still gives me a headache 80% of the time. Still, this is a pretty cool video, Steve - thanks! Here's a well-deserved like and comment for the care and feeding of the Almighty Algorithm. ❤️❤️

    @MaryAnnNytowl@MaryAnnNytowl Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah it feels a couple feet away is best for me. Though depending on the pattern / backdrop environment it can also happen outside that range for me

      @richardpike8748@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
  • Pro Tip for seeing the 3D stereogram images: make the video small, either by viewing on a small monitor (like a phone) or by making the browser window smaller, and get quite close to the images, so your eyes don't have to go super crazy crosseyed, and can more comfortably focus separately on the images.

    @thewiseturtle@thewiseturtle Жыл бұрын
    • for crosseye stereogram its actually easier if the monitor is far away from your eyes. Getting up close to the monitor helps for parallel stereograms

      @merren2306@merren2306 Жыл бұрын
    • @@merren2306 Not for me. Though Steve suggested that these are not crosseyed ones, so maybe that's the difference? Basically, I think that a lot of us are used to using 3D VR headsets where our eyes are right next to tiny images, so it's easier for our muscle memory to figure out how to focus. But maybe I'm weird. :-)

      @thewiseturtle@thewiseturtle Жыл бұрын
    • @@thewiseturtle the apparent focal point of a VR headset is actually infinitely far away

      @merren2306@merren2306 Жыл бұрын
  • This is amazing, great work, and the stereoscopic view was a nice touch.

    @filipporomani230@filipporomani230 Жыл бұрын
  • Sir this is INCREDIBLE ! Well I see the glint on some table creates a circle around the light source every times but I didn’t think about that this way!

    @tienanhhoang6004@tienanhhoang6004 Жыл бұрын
  • Do you have a CNC? Could try making this with a computer? edit: ah. just got to 8:20. very nice! Do you have a CNC?

    @bermchasin@bermchasin Жыл бұрын
  • It's a privelage to learn science from Harry Potter himself !

    @amarnathparasar5903@amarnathparasar5903 Жыл бұрын
  • this is really interesting to watch as a person with stereoblindness due to strabismus - i don't have the ability to see anything in 3 dimensions because that involves stereovision and I can't converge my eyes, but i can see all the other depth cues so i can get a (somewhat impaired) sense of depth. because of this, i can't at all see the images floating above or below the surface as you say because they rely on stereovision, but the complex ones still have depth to me because of the other depth cues it forces, like motion parallax. it's really cool to be able to appreciate a stereogram because of its other features, even if im not getting the full experience

    @ezrapascal@ezrapascal11 ай бұрын
  • Immediately won my favor by situating the stereograms for cross-eye instead of diverging

    @Maxabillion888@Maxabillion888 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m having trouble focusing on the holograms. I’m fixated on Steve’s lovely beard. A full beard looks so good on him!

    @DaveTexas@DaveTexas Жыл бұрын
  • Would be cool to coat the acrylic with carbon soot beforehand.

    @ballenf@ballenf Жыл бұрын
  • I LOVE Steve! Just as I thought that I would really like a Stereogram to quickly get the 3D-impression, he JUST does it! Love it! :)

    @IroAppe@IroAppe Жыл бұрын
  • My sister bought the Styx Paradise Theater LP when it came out. 👍👍 The entire package is a beautiful piece of art. The front of the cover, and reverse, speaks so much! Then the record itself! All laser etched. In 1980, laser etching was cutting edge!

    @DetroitMicroSound@DetroitMicroSound Жыл бұрын
  • Handogram. Normally have to pay cash for those 😂

    @stocktonnash@stocktonnash Жыл бұрын
  • @SteveMould I signed up for Incogni simply off the trust that has grown for you and observable research you put into your videos. Hope it works out! 😬

    @Garyz5@Garyz5 Жыл бұрын
  • fun fact about borromean rings is you can have any number you want! 3 is the standard because it is the minimum required and also featured on the family crest of Italian house Borromeo, presumably where they got their name. the discordian mandala is an example of 5 borromean rings and one of my favorite "shapes" or I guess shape groups as it reminds me of non-periodic tilings of 3-dimensional space, fivefold symmetry, Roger Penrose, and quasicrystals. y'know, just fun maths stuff.

    @theoriginaltubeofyous@theoriginaltubeofyous7 ай бұрын
  • Wow I’ve been alive for so long and never really appreciated that I’m seeing double in the background and not just stuff out of focus

    @williamchen454@williamchen454 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m good at divergent view stereograms but cross eyed ones are always a fairly fiddly for me.

    @douglasjackson295@douglasjackson295 Жыл бұрын
  • i'm so jealous of people who can see stereograms.

    @josephstarr8342@josephstarr8342 Жыл бұрын
    • I can, usually without any effort, but i was struggling with the ones in this video for some reason. Probably because i haver looked at moving stereograms before. How i trained too: everyone say you should look at them cross eyed, i dont (well i dont start off being x-eyed) i try to look straight through them and focus "behind" the images, then they start too merge (when the eyes start going x-eyed without thinking about it).

      @JoriDiculous@JoriDiculous Жыл бұрын
    • It helps me to make the window very small at first, and when I get back into it I can make it larger and larger. That way you don't need to move your eye that far to start.

      @markkalsbeek5883@markkalsbeek5883 Жыл бұрын
    • @@markkalsbeek5883 You make a important point. With cross eyed most people can handle large convergence angles. With divergent look very few people can diverge beyond infinity focus where the eyes look straight ahead. This means with divergent stereograms it is very difficult to achieve alignment if the images are wider than your eye spacing (60-75mm), with cross-eyed look one can train to handle large images, I can easily make two 20" (diagonal) monitors at arms reach come together by squinting.

      @KallePihlajasaari@KallePihlajasaari Жыл бұрын
  • Im so glad to finally have an answer for how holograms are made. This makes a lot of sense.

    @saturnday160@saturnday160 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you Mr Mould for this good teaching. Brilliant actually!

    @gyrogearloose1345@gyrogearloose1345 Жыл бұрын
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