Want to take 3D photos of your body on Fulwa (2025) Hindi Short FilmSnapchat? We've got some awesome news for you.
Snapchat launched a nifty new feature Tuesday that will allow its users to send and receive photos taken in "3D Camera Mode." This is a new kind of photo taken with Snapchat that adds depth to the image and lets users superimpose frames, captions, and accessories at different depths within the photos. They also appear differently to viewers depending on how you rotate your camera.
The result looks like a super-saturated VR still. Viewers can move their phones around to watch the perspectives change within the photo and to explore the photos from different angles.
Anyone will be able to view the photos, but only users who have an iPhone X or above will be able to take them. That makes sense, since this was the first model of iPhone with the "TrueDepth" front-facing camera system, which is what enables Face ID. The Snapchat feature is only available in selfie mode on these iPhones, though Snapchat says it's working on bringing the feature to Android.
The new feature comes with a host of "effects" that lets users adorn their newly three-dimensional still. Snap first rolled out these 3D effects with its Spectacles 3 in August.
SEE ALSO: Snapchat is more popular than everSome of Snapchat's signature lenses, like animal ears and sunglasses, are available in 3D. You can toss a flower frame or a deep pastel background into your photo or let word art and emojis float somewhere in between. While the photos aren't videos, the ability to check them out from different angles makes them dynamic.
To get the feature, you should go ahead and update your Snapchat app. Then, open the app to the camera, navigate to the 3D option option in the dropdown menu, and voila. You're ready to make some three-dimensional photos.
Snapchat's sense of play and ability to keep adding fresh and fun (albeit sometimes insensitive) features consistently sets them apart. Of course, we're sure it'll only be a matter of time before Instagram decides to add the same thing with a slightly different name.
Topics Snapchat Social Media Virtual Reality
Is Spotify Wrapped underwhelming this year? The internet thinks so.How to evaluate nonprofits, philanthropy, and your own donationsSpotify Wrapped 2024: The 10 mostBest streaming deal still live: Get Paramount+ with Showtime for $2.99/monthSpotify Wrapped 2024 is here: How to get yoursCyber Monday 2024: Here are Mashable readers’ most bought itemsThe best Cyber Monday Apple deals at AmazonYouTube's 2024 trending topics: How news, fandom, and indie animation defined the yearBest Cyber Monday gaming deals: New Xbox and PlayStation bundlesBest streaming deal still live: Get Paramount+ with Showtime for $2.99/monthArsenal vs. Manchester United 2024 livestream: Watch Premier League for freeArsenal vs. Manchester United 2024 livestream: Watch Premier League for freeBest Xbox game pass deal: Get 3 months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate for under $50Biden administration takes last minute stand against data brokersAston Villa vs. Brentford 2024 livestream: Watch Premier League for freeBest Samsung deal: Save $1,129.99 in this BOGO deal2024 Cyber Monday ads: Target, Best Buy, Walmart, Home DepotApple Pay can be used to buy cryptocurrency nowHow to unblock Xnxx for freeSpotify Wrapped 2024 arrives: 5 new features to check out Iris Murdoch’s Gayest Novel by Garth Greenwell Redux: The Rapturous Monotony of Metal, Water, Stone by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Free Verse, Farewells, and Fist City by The Paris Review Always the Model, Never the Artist by Madison Mainwaring Staff Picks: Fathers, Fleabag, and the French Toast of Agony by The Paris Review Garp, Forty Years Later by Ilana Masad The Birth of the Semicolon by Cecelia Watson The Soviet Children Who Survived World War II by Svetlana Alexievich What’s the Use of Beauty? by Cody Delistraty Sigrid Nunez’s Portraits of Animal Intelligence by Peter Cameron Susannah Hunnewell, 1966–2019 by The Paris Review Lucky by Shannon Pufahl James Alan McPherson’s Powerful, Strangely Frightening Stories by Edward P. Jones Auden’s Grumpy Moon Landing Poem by Nina Martyris A Graphic Novel before the Term Existed by James Sturm One Word: Striking by Myriam Gurba Redux: Rushing Seas and Dozing Shores by The Paris Review Redux: In Memoriam, Susannah Hunnewell by The Paris Review David Berman, Slacker God by Erin Somers Natalia Ginzburg’s Broken Mirror by Tim Parks
2.593s , 8199.828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Fulwa (2025) Hindi Short Film】,Inspiration Information Network