So, will be a long story...
1. How do you take your stereo pairs? (with two cameras, with a dual lens camera, with shifting a single camera, with a single camera and a mirror splitter?)
2. There are very well defined rules about how to take the stereo pairs and about how to mount them to make a stereo pair. Must to take in consideration the "stereoscopic window" and the rules for alignment.
3. If the rules are broken, the stereoscopic images are difficult to look at. Viewers bear differently the ocular stress due to misalignment (too much convergence, divergence, vertical misalignment that forces the eyes to look in different vertical directions, each).
4. The depth and convergence of the images must be thought in advance depending on the size at which they intend to be seen.
5. Images with very deep depth seen on large screens can induce divergent gaze forcing at the farthest objects in the image, which should be avoided.
This situation can lead to settings that violate the rules regarding the stereoscopic window.
The objects in the image located between the eye and the stereoscopic window must be chosen so that they do not touch/intersect the edges of the window.
An example is in the fractal image called "out of screen", in which the side walls of the interior of "cube" are positioned very close to the stereoscopic window, and the central object is positioned between the eyes and the window so that on a large screen it gives the impression that you can put your hands behind him so that he can be "held in your hands".
Your images are harder to see at large because they are severely misaligned vertically and the stereoscopic window in the bottom half of each image is also violated.