h a l f b a k e r yGo ahead. Stick a fork in it.
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I know there are some other posts about using big video-film type stuff, but I didn't see anything exactly like this, so I thought I'd post....
Thin-vilm video wallpaper is applied to the wall of the room. The image on the wallpaper is fed from a camera, or series of cameras, mounted on the outside
of your house, pointing toward the yard. Now, put this wallpaper everywhere...
Voila, disappearing walls. The perspective wouldn't be right until this could be done in 3-d...
Nightvision cameras would allow viewing at night. Hear a noise in the backyard? Turn on the wall.
Naturally, anything could be projected on them.
Les Nesmann
http://www.photodud...ives/00000052.shtml "Who is Les Nessman and why would he be on board for this?", you ask. [jutta, Sep 21 2001]
Electrochromatic Glass
http://www.howstuff...om/smart-window.htm Much easier. [Worldgineer, Oct 17 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
[link]
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Yeah, if you posit big 3-D video film type stuff, you can do all sorts of neat things. Invisible walls, invisible cars, invisible houses, invisible whatever. It's certainly an old sci-fi trick, though I think image alignment is quite a bit more difficult than they make out. |
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perspective is the real problem, with cameras and displays
the image would only look right from a single point in the
room. How about mixing clear glass with colour lcd and
one way mirror so to see outside you just turn off the
display. |
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Les Nessman would definitely be on board for this...poor guy. |
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I have this in my house - but I call them 'windows'. |
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San Francisco MOMA a few years ago had a GREAT version of this. At one end of a great long hallway you look at the other end, thorugh 2 or 3 doorways. YOu see 2 gigantic panes of glass, floor to ceiling, in the last room. As you walk closer, it's still fairly amazing to see these 2 gigantic panes of glass, floor to ceiling, jutting out from opposite corners and almost meeting in the middle of the room, but with JUST enough space between the edges to walk through. But when you finally get there, it's not glass at all. There's NOTHING there...just green ribbon (the color of the sides of tempered glass!), running along the floor from the center of the room, up the corner of the wall, across the ceiling, and pulled taut down to meet the other end of the ribbon. Very convincing, even up close. People would almost always walk through the space in the middle, rather than walk through the glass. No place for me to do it in my tiny apartment, though. Too bad. |
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