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Well in light of the recently announced IRTC topic "Complexity" I figure a
multi-fractal based water effect is fairly on topic (perhaps?). So I've
adapted this to be a more dramatic image.
Changes: I've moved the ship further away and smashed it's windows, there's
some nice media to fogging and mist from the waves, and some general
tweaking of the overall colours in the scene.
Also, since it's been requested, I've posted the source in p.b.s-f. Enjoy!
I think it's basically finished!
What do you think?
--
Tek
http://evilsuperbrain.com
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Attachments:
Download 'ridgedmf.jpg' (371 KB)
Preview of image 'ridgedmf.jpg'
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you're water is truly amazing, but the ship, imho, needs a little bit of work.
Or at least make each window cracked in a different way :) right now it looks
like some kind of logo :)
cu!
--
#macro G(b,e)b+(e-b)*C/50#end#macro _(b,e,k,l)#local C=0;#while(C<50)
sphere{G(b,e)+3*z.1pigment{rgb G(k,l)}finish{ambient 1}}#local C=C+1;
#end#end _(y-x,y,x,x+y)_(y,-x-y,x+y,y)_(-x-y,-y,y,y+z)_(-y,y,y+z,x+y)
_(0x+y.5+y/2x)_(0x-y.5+y/2x) // ZK http://www.povplace.com
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It's dramatic to be sure!
It mostly looks really good. Only... the water doesn't quite loose
"right" Can't put my finger on why... Too opaque? Not reflective enough?
I don't know.
Other than that, it's a pretty good image!
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Doh! Thanks for pointing that out, there's a typo in my code so I was
resetting a random seed for each window!
--
Tek
http://evilsuperbrain.com
"Zeger Knaepen" <zeg### [at] povplacecom> wrote in message
news:45576a5f$1@news.povray.org...
> you're water is truly amazing, but the ship, imho, needs a little bit of
> work. Or at least make each window cracked in a different way :) right now
> it looks like some kind of logo :)
>
> cu!
> --
> #macro G(b,e)b+(e-b)*C/50#end#macro _(b,e,k,l)#local C=0;#while(C<50)
> sphere{G(b,e)+3*z.1pigment{rgb G(k,l)}finish{ambient 1}}#local C=C+1;
> #end#end _(y-x,y,x,x+y)_(y,-x-y,x+y,y)_(-x-y,-y,y,y+z)_(-y,y,y+z,x+y)
> _(0x+y.5+y/2x)_(0x-y.5+y/2x) // ZK http://www.povplace.com
>
>
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It might be that the water's too blue, I've faked the sky to be blue
overhead with only clouds at the horizon, to make the water reflect more
blue than it would on a cloudy day. That was just an attempt to make the
water look more like you'd expect, rather than realistic...
I'll do a test render without this trickery (though it looks far too grey in
the low-res preview).
--
Tek
http://evilsuperbrain.com
"Orchid XP v3" <voi### [at] devnull> wrote in message
news:45576b1b$1@news.povray.org...
> It's dramatic to be sure!
>
> It mostly looks really good. Only... the water doesn't quite loose "right"
> Can't put my finger on why... Too opaque? Not reflective enough? I don't
> know.
>
> Other than that, it's a pretty good image!
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Overall Tek, that is a nice image. :o) But, the one thing that stands out
to me is that straight line on the high crest in (almost) the centre of the
image. Could you not move the life bouy over to the crest to hide it, and
kind of have it being swept upwards?
If you've cracked the sea, then you'll have plenty of time to sort that
ship out. ;)
~Steve~
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Tek wrote:
> It might be that the water's too blue, I've faked the sky to be blue
> overhead with only clouds at the horizon, to make the water reflect more
> blue than it would on a cloudy day. That was just an attempt to make the
> water look more like you'd expect, rather than realistic...
>
> I'll do a test render without this trickery (though it looks far too grey in
> the low-res preview).
>
I think it is not just about what is expected. There is an emotive
juxtaposition. The water is beautiful with clear, aqua, tints
attractive to the eye, but still, it is utterly indifferent to the
sinking boat it envelops,...envelops with barely a shrug. A hueless,
pasty countenance for the water would produce a different result.
Repellent, awful, opaque. You would need a greater sense of mayhem and
drama surrounding the boat as it goes under. Right now the waves are
like the claws of a beautiful cat when it suddenly betrays its feral nature.
You picture is an astounding technical advance, in direct line from that
original piece by Alberto, that showed us the astonishing potential of
isosurfaces. But there is something to your title too. You signal
"artistic", probably in the sense of "stylized". And I think it is
true. Stylizations, are always to some degree, a meditation on the
effect of stylization. Van Gogh paintings for instance.
I have always loved marine paintings, and I never cared a hoot about the
boat. The boat is rarely more than an excuse to do water. And how a
particular painter stylized his water is always the fascinating thing.
For a stylization it must be, because water is never still for even a
moment. Even the airborne, gobbing, foam caught in a stop-action photo
of a crashing wave is not water as the human eye sees it. So an artist
must sneak up on the reality of water. It is often a matter of focusing
on one of the aspects of water, perhaps its solidity is emphasized, or
its transparency, its power, its motion, or its turbulence. Often there
is an attempt to understand its turbulent mayhem according to more
regular patterns. The focus on one representative aspect of the subject
allows for coherency and homogeneity within the limits of the technique
used. If this one aspect is observed and translated correctly the
portrayal is believed. Necessarily these attempts push the limits of
the available tool. Painters employ the effects of paint application:
measured strokes of brush, impastoed workings of the knife, delicately
laid in tints, splatters, or wiped back effects of the rag. With water,
tromp l'oeil is really not possible, (except perhaps with animation,)
for a still picture of water is automatically artificial. With the
painting of water we have always accepted the role of stylization, in
the sense of a knowing exploitation of paint application, together with
the judicious focusing of observation, in the artist's attempt to sneak
up on realism.
Raytracing, has been dominated by the technical hunt. It is a hunt based
in the paradigm of the subject-first-modeled-then-viewed, and it has
mostly allowed stylization only where the separation from realism is
clear and safe. It is acceptable, for instance, with animated cartoons,
which emphasize gesture, or perhaps with alien landscapes or beast-like
figures, where what is "real" is a hybrid fantasy anyway. Your picture
approaches a queasier area where tromp l'oeil results are sometimes
possible. A liquid surface rippled by concentric, even interfering,
sine waves can be modeled directly, while the turbulated patterns of
tree bark can only be simulated. Simulated closely, albeit, close
enough for tromp l'oeil even, but within the result there lurks the
conceptual tripwire that it is not exact, that what we relegate to
randomness may yet be a form we do not recognize.
Your portrayal of water, here, flirts with a difficult progression. The
transparency has a tromp l'oeil result. Same with the fractal peaking of
wavelets and dissolving foam textures especially in select areas. The
longer roll of crests and troughs is believable. But the steepening
crests topped with foam are a harder sell. And yet they are the main
attraction. They are also the most difficult to observe and remember
from real experience. They have a conceptual presence in our minds
which can be quite tangible but which may differ markedly from their
appearance in reality. The reality is motion, not stopped motion.
Steep waves "heave", "build", "boil", "churn", "break", "pitch", "roll",
"burst", "topple", etc. The look of this as stopped action is a
construct. Your picture asks us to suspend our personal concepts, and
accept your synthesis of how this might look. We must abandon the hope
of complete illusion while integrating its partial successes with the
more speculative parts of you synthesis. Is this the new "stylized"?
Can we accept the "artistic" outcome even as we relish the technical
underpinnings. Can we make the small step which substitutes fractal for
wave, and enjoy the real illusion of transparent liquid, even as we are
aware that we are doing both? I think I can.
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From: Tor Olav Kristensen
Subject: Re: artistic water final - IRTC WIP
Date: 12 Nov 2006 18:44:47
Message: <4557b1ef@news.povray.org>
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St. wrote:
> Overall Tek, that is a nice image. :o) But, the one thing that stands out
> to me is that straight line on the high crest in (almost) the centre of the
> image.
...
As many has said before me: The sea is great !
But I was about to comment on the same as Steve mentions above.
Similar annoying lines have appeared in several of my isosurface
images too.
In the attached image, some of these lines are marked with arrows.
I have a suspicion that this may be caused by a defect in one of
POV-Ray's noise generators.
--
Tor Olav
http://subcube.com
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Attachments:
Download 'isosurface_terrain_lines.jpg' (152 KB)
Preview of image 'isosurface_terrain_lines.jpg'
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"Tor Olav Kristensen" <tor### [at] TOBEREMOVEDgmailcom> wrote in message
news:4557b1ef@news.povray.org...
> I have a suspicion that this may be caused by a defect in one of
> POV-Ray's noise generators.
Your ones might be, but mine are just the "ridges" in the "ridged" mf. They
look fine when they occur on the smoother parts of the ocean, in fact they
look great, but foam shouldn't be able to have sharp edges.
I can't really think of a way to smooth off ridges in a ridged fractal, so
I'll just try to cover it up with some mist/spray effects!
--
Tek
http://evilsuperbrain.com
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That's a thoughtful analysis, Jim. Thank you.
I suppose that all this is the reason why, when I saw this last image by
Tek, I was immediately reminded of Hokusai's Big Wave, or some marines from
the 17th/18th century.
Thomas
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