Former IMAX Camera Technician - Space Shuttle In Cabin Camera .
Former Mechanical Engineering Design Technologist, Former Toolmaker, Former Aerospace CAD Design Engineer.
Stereo Photography Enthusiast since 1985 or so.
I thought about vertical parallax recently and came to the conclusion that having both vertical and horizontal parallax is equivalent to having a rotation with only horizontal parallax.
In the case of this photograph, rotating the image about 13° CCW (each chip) gives far better alignment (you also have a little "zoom" difference). The verticals are of course totally tilted, but in the case of this picture, the effect is interesting nonetheless.
To create the colour effects I used Topaz Labs "Adjust". This let me create the sepia and desaturated effect, as well as the white vignette. The levels were then corrected in Gimp.
Thanks Jack. it was shot cha cha, which left a vertical misalignment that is unrepairable. I wanted to show it anyhow. The low saturation and sepia tinge with a faded edges was an artistic choice which I hoped would take attention away from the image's weaknesses.
The point of view is well chosen with part of the door and part of the indoor architecture behind and great 3D placement.
Also, the treatment of the photograph is well done and adds some lovely out-of-spacetime feeling.
It is unfortunate that there is a vertical parallax component and two odd rivalries (strange reflection on the handle in right chip, and loss of details in the feathering in left chip), because the photo is really nice otherwise.