I loaded the images you gave me into Lentigram and I tried to guess the size of the image based on the name of the interlaced file. I used 75.05LPI for and 600PPI.
I tested your image on a lens with an angle of view of 25deg. I do not think you use such narrow angle, I actually think you use a larger one but I used this one just for an initial estimation.
After that, I went into anaglyph mode and selected the depth measurement tool to estimate the depth of your image. As you can see on the attached file (you need to wear red and cyan glasses) the estimated depth on this lens is just half an inch. If instead I use an angle of view of 49deg, which I assume is your case, the depth goes down to a tenth of an inch.
In summary, you image has not enough depth for a 3D lenticular image. To create an anaglyph definitely, but not for a lenticular image. You can notice in the screenshot that I selected two images which are almost at the opposite sides of the sequence in order to visualize a decent 3D effect in anaglyph mode, which should not be the case.
There is an additional defect on your image: the most important detail in the picture, the eyes, lie behind the stereoscopic window while they should lie On the stereoscopic window. Even if you had enough parallax on this image, the face of your subject would appear blurred. This is not a problem for a stereo anaglyph but it is not working for lenticular where object appearing far from the stereo window will be blurred out.
I'm not an expert in creating depth maps because I usually takes pictures from different angles. I place the cameras far enough to cover the whole lenticular angle. If my lenticular lens has a viewing angle if a=37deg and I take the pictures at D=2m far away from the subject, I use a multi-stereo base (the distance from the opposite cameras) equal to 2*D*tan(a/2). Read this post for more details on this
http://kineticsystem.blogspot.com/2018/01/the-lenticular-medium.html
The number of pictures is OK but it does not have any effect of the depth of the image. The depth is controlled by your image total parallax and by the angle of view of the lens. Having a longer sequence if images is only useful in conjunction with the bokeh effect, to remove discretization artifacts automatically.
I cannot give suggestions on how to create a depth map which is an art in itself, I simply do not do it, but once you have it you definitely need to push it more. One possible tool that you cold use to convert a 2D image + depth map into a sequence of images is Blender. Please refer to this old post here, especially the last comment:
https://creativecow.net/forums/thread/twixtor-and-depth-of-field/
I'm using After Effect an a plugin called Twixtor to obtain a long sequence of images from a shot taken with 5 cameras, but there is still a lot of manual work behind. Twixtor does not give any help with adding depth, it only create additional frames between the frames you already have.
Kind Regards,
Giovanni