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I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
-Ive
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Attachments:
Download 'swan lake.jpg' (187 KB)
Preview of image 'swan lake.jpg'
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Am 02.03.2011 05:22, schrieb Ive:
> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
Very, /very/ beautiful!
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>Ive on date 02/03/2011 05:22 wrote:
> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
>
> -Ive
Impressive!
Paolo
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Ive <ive### [at] lilysoftorg> wrote:
> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
Lovely. I especially like the worn marble floor, very natural.
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plain froggin' beautiful. :)
--
a game sig: http://tinyurl.com/d3rxz9
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Ive <ive### [at] lilysoftorg> wrote:
> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
>
> -Ive
Beautiful work as always, Ive!
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Am 02.03.2011 20:59, schrieb Robert McGregor:
> Beautiful work as always, Ive!
I disagree: This /not/ just beautiful as always - it's even beyond that :-)
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> Am 02.03.2011 20:59, schrieb Robert McGregor:
>
>> Beautiful work as always, Ive!
>
> I disagree: This /not/ just beautiful as always - it's even beyond that :-)
I think it's even a bit further ahead, if that is possible... ;)
--
Jaime Vives Piqueres
La Persistencia de la Ignorancia
http://www.ignorancia.org
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Ive <ive### [at] lilysoftorg> wrote:
> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
>
> -Ive
As others have noted, fantastic.
There appears to be some light bloom at the bright highlights. Was this
post-processed in, or an added (beneficial) effect from the focal blur?
There is one subtle touch you may look at adding (or maybe you have and I can't
notice..). It appears as if the mirror is a mirrored surface, whereas mirrors
of this type are usually glass mirrors. Mayber try adding a thin glass layer
between your mirroed surface and the swans, this can add two subtle effects
depending on the viewing angle: the reflection can get attenuated a bit and even
coloured slightly by the glass colour, and there will be a fainter, second
reflection on the glass surface.
-tgq
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Am 03.03.2011 17:19, schrieb Trevor G Quayle:
> Ive<ive### [at] lilysoftorg> wrote:
>> I had the idea for this little scene before I did watch "Black Swan" - I
>> swear - but actually I made the scene while viewing the Oscar night. So
>> well, kind of tribute to Academy Award winner Natalie Portman ;)
>>
>> -Ive
>
> As others have noted, fantastic.
>
> There appears to be some light bloom at the bright highlights. Was this
> post-processed in, or an added (beneficial) effect from the focal blur?
>
in this case it just happened as a nice side effect from the focal blur,
but in the past I did also use media containers for the whole scene (no
need to mention that this sky-rockets the render time) and also simple
post work by using filter functions of an image processing library I
once did develop as my day-pay-job.
> There is one subtle touch you may look at adding (or maybe you have and I can't
> notice..).
;)
> It appears as if the mirror is a mirrored surface, whereas mirrors
> of this type are usually glass mirrors. Mayber try adding a thin glass layer
> between your mirroed surface and the swans, this can add two subtle effects
> depending on the viewing angle: the reflection can get attenuated a bit and even
> coloured slightly by the glass colour, and there will be a fainter, second
> reflection on the glass surface.
>
well, this is exactly what I did and it makes a huge difference compared
to some simple reflective surface. It is a piece of glass (with fresnel
reflection and all) and on its back side is a thin layer of silver.
You'll notice it if you look e.g. at the reflection of the upper wings
of the black swan.
thank you very much for your comments
-Ive
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