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> I like the textures and the lighting, but I'm not sure about the
> composition. Imho there are to many vertically aligned objects: the candle,
> the bottle and the vase.
Yes, there is something disturbing about it... but I'm not at all a
conscious composer: I usually do trial&error for the composition. In this
case I didn't finish yet this part... and here you suggestions can be of
great help, thanks.
> I'm no expert in composition, but this is how I would do it: I would use the
> bottle as a candle-holder (with some dripped wax along the sides,
Yes, I was already thinking on something like this... but on the other
hand I liked the idea of having a bottle with wine still in it. Perhaps I
can have two bottles, one as candle-holder and other with wine to drink.
Indeed, I also toyed the idea of making a more general candle macro which
accepts an object as parameter, to make the dripping fall over it... but in
my head it seemed a too complex use of trace(), and I wanted to just make a
quick scene to get ride of that lack of inspiration.
> keep the glass, the vase and the peaches (they are peaches, right? well,
> they look like peaches :)) where they're now,
I'm glad it was clear they were peaches... I didn't mention it on
purpose, to see if someone asked "what the hell is that fruit?". But seems
it is at least recognizable as a peach thanks to the aoi pattern.
> and add something metal lying on the
> table in between the bottle and the vase, not sure what though (maybe the
> current candle-holder (what's the name anyway? :)), but lying down?)
This is indeed a great idea... as if the beautiful candle holder was
discarded for being too nice, and replaced for a more rustic holder instead.
It is worth a try... ;)
> of course you'd lose the interesting caustics :(
Not necessarily... I can have two bottles! :)
--
Jaime
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