I'm not sure what you're going for here. The only actual stereo 3D features that I can perceive in the image are the set of circles over on the left, which sit on a flat plane behind the screen, and the diagonal lines in the lower lefthand corner. The rest of the image falls into the category of 'retinal rivalry', where each eye sees something different enough to make stereoscopic fusion difficult or impossible.
The 'rules' of anaglyph 3D (or any overlapping stereoscopic method) are pretty simple:
1. There should be a single version of each component for each eye (left and right).
2. These left and right components should be identical except for horizontal shifts, allowing them to be fused stereoscopically.
3. Neither view should occude or interfere with the other (that is, objects in each view can occlude other objects in that view, but objects in one view should not occlude or interfere with objects in the other view).
You're free to break these rules of course, but you should make sure you understand them thoroughly first.
Posted by Hoberman, Perry at March 28, 2005 7:26 AM