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Stephen McAvoy wrote:
> This goes down the old "we see what we expect to see" road, which is
> fascinating.
All it takes for me, is that I get "turned around" in my sense of
directions. Suddenly an environment I am used to "looks totally
strange". Yesterday I was walking around a park here called Marcus
Garvey Gardens. It lies directly across 5th Avenue. The avenue just
stops at one side then continues again on the other side. I was on the
north side of the park where 5th abutts but I *thought* I was on the
south side. Total disorientation.
IMHO Huxley (A) was on the right path when he said that
> the mind is a reducing valve to the universe. It enables us to have an
> understandable view of it.
I loved Huxley's writings on art. I especially liked the line that went
something like: "If religion is the opiate of the masses, then surely
draperies are the opiate of painters". Loved his discussion of the late
work of Goya.
>
>
>>I assume you are aware of this:
>>http://www.koopfilms.com/hockney/
>
>
> I saw it when it was first broadcast in the UK. Hence the mention of
> the camera obscura.
>
I haven't seen the program. I happened to read a bit about it recently,
just what I could find on the web, but I didn't really dig in. Put it
off to later then lost the link. I think it is pretty interesting
though. I had been trying turn up anything I could on the subject of
Vermeer, and/or the Dutch painting of his time, and mirrors, in the hope
that I could make some connections vis-a-vis Rene Bui's entry in POVCOMP.
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John D. Gwinner wrote:
> The pavement is very good looking.
Thanks!
> I'm not sure about the autobahn, but normally worn asphault has a
> pattern of cracks that I haven't found a good way to simulate.
Yes, I also tried that with the crackle pattern, but without much
success... so I didn't use it for that image. But after you mentioned
it, I played with the metric of the crackle and it looks now a bit more
credible, so I included it on the last version.
--
Jaime
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St. wrote:
> I think I would add some off-yellow and grey foliage under the bushes
> in that central reservation .
Yes, you are right... only with 2 different colorations it looks much
better now. And it was not that hard without consuming much additional
memory: on the mesh include generated by POVTree, I changed the
placement of the textures statement from inside the FOLIAGE object to
the object instance on the TREE union, and created another union TREE2
with a different texture.
Thanks!
--
Jaime
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Greg M. Johnson wrote:
> breathtaking.
Thanks!
> From my wacky perspective, somehow this would be even cooler if you
> were to add to it something that ain't photorealistic or overly
> stylized in construction. That would make it extra cool. If you
> were to say put this image as-is on a subway billboard
> advertisement, who'd care-- it's just a photograph.
The problem is my imagination... for that kind of touch it's really
poor... but let me see what I can do. :)
--
Jaime
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Thanks to all for the criticism! I've corrected some of the flaws
mentioned and will be working on the rest for the final version, ASAP.
I'm sending a test without radiosity nor focal blur, because with
area_light is taking now *very long* to render (10 hours so far, and it
didn't complete half of the image).
--
Jaime
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'autobahn-050501-2.jpg' (126 KB)
Preview of image 'autobahn-050501-2.jpg'

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Jaime Vives Piqueres wrote:
> Thanks to all for the criticism! I've corrected some of the flaws
> mentioned and will be working on the rest for the final version, ASAP.
>
Damn. I'm wordless now.
--
Eero "Aero" Ahonen
http://www.zbxt.net
aer### [at] removethis zbxt net invalid
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Jaime Vives Piqueres wrote:
> Thanks to all for the criticism! I've corrected some of the flaws
> mentioned and will be working on the rest for the final version, ASAP.
>
> I'm sending a test without radiosity nor focal blur, because with
> area_light is taking now *very long* to render (10 hours so far, and it
> didn't complete half of the image).
>
> --
> Jaime
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
Some comments:
1.- Thanks God I was sit in my chair when I saw it.
2.- My wife said "... and?"; "It's 3D" I answered; "Whoao..."
3.- My little daughter couldn't believe the trees and the cars were done
on a computer.
4.- I'm very proud of you. Great job Jaime.
5.- Sure it's redundant but "Stop posting photographsssssss" ;-)
... keep it up
________________________
Txemi Jendrix
www.txemijendrix.com
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de news:42767763@news.povray.org...
> Thanks to all for the criticism! I've corrected some of the flaws
> mentioned and will be working on the rest for the final version, ASAP.
>
> I'm sending a test without radiosity nor focal blur, because with
> area_light is taking now *very long* to render (10 hours so far, and it
> didn't complete half of the image).
>
> --
> Jaime
Wow that's even much better :-)
I don't know if it is the no radiosity option but wet can see a lot more
details.
When I compare our 2 images, it's definitely the last which is a photo ;-)
Marc
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Yadgar <yaz### [at] gmx de> wrote:
> High!
>
>>
> to have invented raytracing?
>
> See you in Khyberspace!
>
> Yadgar
Woodcuts --> Raytracing ??? :-)
Shame on me!
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Jim Charter <jrc### [at] msn com> wrote:
> Stephen McAvoy wrote:
>
>
> > This goes down the old "we see what we expect to see" road, which is
> > fascinating.
>
> All it takes for me, is that I get "turned around" in my sense of
> directions. Suddenly an environment I am used to "looks totally
> strange". Yesterday I was walking around a park here called Marcus
> Garvey Gardens.
That renowned son of Jamaica has a garden in NY? Fame!
>It lies directly across 5th Avenue. The avenue just
> stops at one side then continues again on the other side. I was on the
> north side of the park where 5th abutts but I *thought* I was on the
> south side. Total disorientation.
It generally takes mothers little helpers (if your mother is Jamaican) to
another.
> IMHO Huxley (A) was on the right path when he said that
> > the mind is a reducing valve to the universe. It enables us to have an
> > understandable view of it.
>
> I loved Huxley's writings on art. I especially liked the line that went
> something like: "If religion is the opiate of the masses, then surely
> draperies are the opiate of painters".
LOL in fact I had to leave the office I was giggling so.
>Loved his discussion of the late
> work of Goya.
>
Missed that.
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