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Hi everyone,
It's been a while since I've posted an image to these newsgroups. I can
never seem to finish my projects...
The rock formation is composed of two isosurfaces: one for the head and
another for the body. Each portion has it's own png file to give the
impression of character.
The scene was rendered in two passes. The second pass adds the bloom
effect. Low radiosity and high isosurface settings were used.
The whole thing rendered in just under ten minutes, thanks to the low
radiosity settings.
Questions and comments are welcome, as always~
Sam
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'lbtest3_21b.jpg' (100 KB)
Preview of image 'lbtest3_21b.jpg'
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man, you're about as amazing a trickster as Rune!
those stereographic povray scenes, the luminous bloom and now this... how about
a rendering of Mount Rushmore next? ;)
Post a reply to this message
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stbenge <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> It's been a while since I've posted an image to these newsgroups. I can
> never seem to finish my projects...
You're not the only one. Excellent work though. Has an effect you don't see
too often in POV-Ray. Kinda like this one.
http://www.irtc.org/ftp/pub/stills/2005-10-31/elements.jpg
Keep it up.
- Ricky
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nemesis wrote:
> man, you're about as amazing a trickster as Rune!
>
> those stereographic povray scenes, the luminous bloom and now this... how about
> a rendering of Mount Rushmore next? ;)
Thanks. No on the Rushmore idea. I find the whole prospect a
spirit-crushingly boring one. Unless I did something to the of the
presidents...
Sam
Post a reply to this message
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triple_r wrote:
>> It's been a while since I've posted an image to these newsgroups. I can
>> never seem to finish my projects...
>
> You're not the only one. Excellent work though. Has an effect you don't see
> too often in POV-Ray. Kinda like this one.
>
> http://www.irtc.org/ftp/pub/stills/2005-10-31/elements.jpg
My first impression upon seeing Tek's image was that it was photo. Then
I thought, wait, those rocks somehow resemble the granite pattern. Then
I remember seeing the entry some time ago :)
> Keep it up.
Sure will. Here's another version of the same image, this time with a
little chromatic aberration and film grain (rendered in POV, sans bloom).
Sam
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'chromatic_aberration0_07.jpg' (93 KB)
Preview of image 'chromatic_aberration0_07.jpg'
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stbenge <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> Sure will. Here's another version of the same image, this time with a
> little chromatic aberration and film grain (rendered in POV, sans bloom).
>
> Sam
An impressive combination of effects. Now you just need too much unsharp mask ,
excessive channel-dependent noise-reduction -- oh, and some of that hideous
purple digital-camera bloom -- and you'll have yourself a real photo.
- Ricky
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"triple_r" <rre### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> You're not the only one. Excellent work though. Has an effect you don't see
> too often in POV-Ray. Kinda like this one.
>
> http://www.irtc.org/ftp/pub/stills/2005-10-31/elements.jpg
yeah. I wonder where's Tek...
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"stbenge" <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote in message
news:47b130b8@news.povray.org...
> Hi everyone,
>
> It's been a while since I've posted an image to these newsgroups. I can
> never seem to finish my projects...
Me neither. :-)
> Questions and comments are welcome, as always~
I love this! The "formation" has a lot of character built into it, but it
still leaves the viewer believing that it's just a natural rock formation.
Nothing appears to be "man-made" or artificial. Very nice.
Post a reply to this message
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> My first impression upon seeing Tek's image was that it was photo. Then
> I thought, wait, those rocks somehow resemble the granite pattern. Then
> I remember seeing the entry some time ago :)
>
You know you have been raytracing too long when you see a render and
instantly know what patterns were used.
It would be more worrying if you could recognize the isosurface function
by looking at a shape, though.
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High!
stbenge schrieb:
> The rock formation is composed of two isosurfaces: one for the head and
> another for the body. Each portion has it's own png file to give the
> impression of character.
Impressive... the rock texture reminds me of the sandstone cliffs at
Bamiyan, Afghanistan, the site of the former giant carved rock Buddha
statues blown up by the Taliban in 2001 - or even of the Buddhas themselves!
See you on www.khyberspace.de!
Yadgar
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