does this look 3d to you?

If i wanted the bench to really POP I'd shoot it with a view camera. A bit of forward tilt of the lensboard would sharpen the focus on both the seat and backrest of the bench, while utilizing a combination of front and back swings would let you keep both ends of the bench equally sharp. Using the correct equipment for the job at hand will easily produce the results you want. Post can't. It's counter to the laws of physics.
 
@Sparrow
I think the first looks more 3D, perhaps of the stronger contrasts.

This is my 3D example
3613724481_fa432c0dbd_o.jpg



and a second
3613734253_3a8be8cbd3_o.jpg

Wow! That second picture is like looking at a true stereoscopic image but without the viewer 🙂
 
kilawea iki, Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii, USA, Contax II, 35/2.8 Biogon, vintage 1940. The site looked exactly like this, lots of glare, looking toward the sun. Overexposed, but captures the sense of the place when I was there
 
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