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Well, here is a new visit to a landscape I submitted in 2004 to the Desert
topic of the IRTC. The landscape is composed of two isosurfaces (rocks and
dunes) and a height_field in the distance. I reworked a little bit the
textures used there, but not extensively. I added a media atmosphere and an
area_light sun, tweaked the radiosity settings, and I exchanged the original
cacti with Micha Reiser's blob bushes. Finally, I added the human touch
(Chappe's semaphore, signpost, human and pet, old foundation) and changed
the aspect ratio.
This is not Gurghusht (sorry Yadgar :-) ). This is Terra Incognita
Australis (*not* Australia!) discovered in 1602 by Johannes Isidorusz.
Kabeljauw (1581-1612) an early explorer of the VOC, and only rediscovered
once by the adventurer Markus von Kopelstock in 1923... or so my imagination
reconstructed history... ;-)
Rendertime has been extreme. I think that, on and off, the image took about
80 hours or some more to be finished on a dual core machine using version
3.7.
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'DesertLandscape_2010_final.jpg' (323 KB)
Preview of image 'DesertLandscape_2010_final.jpg'
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Thomas de Groot wrote:
> Well, here is a new visit to a landscape I submitted in 2004 to the Desert
> topic of the IRTC. The landscape is composed of two isosurfaces (rocks and
> dunes) and a height_field in the distance. I reworked a little bit the
> textures used there, but not extensively. I added a media atmosphere and an
> area_light sun, tweaked the radiosity settings, and I exchanged the original
> cacti with Micha Reiser's blob bushes. Finally, I added the human touch
> (Chappe's semaphore, signpost, human and pet, old foundation) and changed
> the aspect ratio.
>
> This is not Gurghusht (sorry Yadgar :-) ). This is Terra Incognita
> Australis (*not* Australia!) discovered in 1602 by Johannes Isidorusz.
> Kabeljauw (1581-1612) an early explorer of the VOC, and only rediscovered
> once by the adventurer Markus von Kopelstock in 1923... or so my imagination
> reconstructed history... ;-)
>
> Rendertime has been extreme. I think that, on and off, the image took about
> 80 hours or some more to be finished on a dual core machine using version
> 3.7.
>
> Thomas
Great scene! landscaping is superb--very believable shapes for the
rocks and dunes, and the textures are excellent for them. I think there
ought to be a little green lizard on the one of the close rocks though.
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"Kirk Andrews" <kir### [at] tektonartcom> schreef in bericht
news:4be5907c$1@news.povray.org...
>
> Great scene! landscaping is superb--very believable shapes for the rocks
> and dunes, and the textures are excellent for them. I think there ought
> to be a little green lizard on the one of the close rocks though.
Thanks Kirk!
Yes! I wanted to put a lizard there and then forgot all about it :-( I
shall add it soon though. Thanks for reminding me.
Thomas
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On 05/08/2010 09:46 AM, Thomas de Groot wrote:
> Well, here is a new visit to a landscape I submitted in 2004 to the
> Desert topic of the IRTC. The landscape is composed of two isosurfaces
> (rocks and dunes) and a height_field in the distance.
These dunes look very nice, tough the ripples seem too perfectly
aligned... anyhow a very good attemp for such a difficult subject.
The rocks are great, very geological-looking in shape. Congrats!
--
Jaime Vives Piqueres
http://www.ignorancia.org
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"Jaime Vives Piqueres" <jai### [at] ignoranciaorg> schreef in bericht
news:4be6d64b$1@news.povray.org...
>
> These dunes look very nice, tough the ripples seem too perfectly
> aligned... anyhow a very good attemp for such a difficult subject.
>
> The rocks are great, very geological-looking in shape. Congrats!
Thanks indeed, Jaime. I am not too happy about the sand ripples either. The
textures needs more work, especially with the alignment. Maybe a bit more
controlled turbulence will do the job. Something still on the ToDo list.
The rocks isosurface was one of the first compositions which led me later to
my Geomorph macro.
Thomas
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