Stereoscopic Photography is a body of work in which two discrete images are recorded and presented to each of the viewer's eyes creating the experience of three-dimensional depth. The technique was popular throughout the 1800s and early 1900s with many households owning their own stereoscope and card sets. By accentuating the stereoscopic angles involved in the photography, widening or shortening the natural eye distances when photographed, the spaces take on a hyperreal quality as if carved out of reality itself. These spaces, while at times sitting silently within themselves, explore the medium of photographic imagery compositions in third depth dimension, exploring capturing a volume of space and expressing new explorations of compositional layout within this third dimension.