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Wishing everyone here a very merry christmas
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Attachments:
Download 'Christmas2005.jpg' (163 KB)
Preview of image 'Christmas2005.jpg'
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Makes me feel warm, being in the room!
HAPPY HOLIDAYS!
Ken
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Wish you a wonderful Christmas, too, Gail. Judging by your location that's
an imaginative rendering. :)
Bob
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"Bob Hughes" <omniverse@charter%net> wrote in message
news:43aa796d$1@news.povray.org...
> Wish you a wonderful Christmas, too, Gail. Judging by your location that's
> an imaginative rendering. :)
>
*g* I always imagine christmas scenes with snow, even though here it's
blazing sunshine, blue skies, 27 degrees.
Yearning for what I don't get I suppose.
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High!
Gail Shaw wrote:
> Wishing everyone here a very merry christmas
Not really convincing... the background is too foggy, in any case too
foggy for stars to be visible in a real scene! However, the candle
flames and the shooting star look nice...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
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news:43abfab7$1@news.povray.org...
> High!
>
> Gail Shaw wrote:
> > Wishing everyone here a very merry christmas
>
> Not really convincing... the background is too foggy, in any case too
> foggy for stars to be visible in a real scene!
Not stars. Is falling snow. Sorry it's not convincing. I haven't seen real
snow in 25 years.
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"Gail Shaw" <gsh### [at] sentechsacom> wrote in message
news:43ac64e9@news.povray.org...
>
> news:43abfab7$1@news.povray.org...
>> foggy for stars to be visible in a real scene!
>
> Not stars. Is falling snow. Sorry it's not convincing. I haven't seen real
> snow in 25 years.
Not even mountain snow? That's kinda sad, Gail. I'd mail a snowball over to
you if I ever get any snow here again, except you've probably seen the
melted kind. ;)
seen that falling star already. Has some surrealism going on there if
thinking of the snow in the sky as being a starry night along with the other
foreground snowflakes in front of the terrain. I considered the falling star
to be artistic license anyway, so it looked right to me.
I guess if you wanted to get technical about it we probably couldn't see the
snowflakes much beyond the room light, except for the haze created by the
numerous flakes farther out (which you definitely got right). This is how I
considered the falling star to be magically appearing through all that,
without thinking of the sky as actually being star-filled at the same time.
Of course, the Christmas theme helped see it that way. :)
Bob
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"Bob Hughes" <omniverse@charter%net> wrote in message
news:43acbbff$1@news.povray.org...
> Not even mountain snow? That's kinda sad, Gail. I'd mail a snowball over
to
> you if I ever get any snow here again, except you've probably seen the
> melted kind. ;)
Seen white-capped mountains, but always at a distance. The only white stuff
that falls
from the sky here is hail (and you don't want to be out in that)
I've never been up in the mountains during winter, so no snow experience
there. I prefer to take holidays during the warmer seasons.
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High!
Gail Shaw wrote:
> Seen white-capped mountains, but always at a distance.
Yes, the Drakensberge are surely high enough for snow at least in winter...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
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Nice tinsel. Should probably be more sparkly tho. (But then, I love
shiny things!)
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