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Hi Pov-Rayers.
My virtual mannequins have now evolved so that other creatures are catered
for such as bats, as shown in the picture below. I had originally steered
away from other creatures because of the difficulty of creating wings from
only basic objects, however, they came out quite well.
I hope you like this moody scene; please remember there is a lot to improve.
James S.
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Attachments:
Download 'bat and cat.jpg' (139 KB)
Preview of image 'bat and cat.jpg'
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"JS" <bos### [at] yahoocouk> wrote:
> My virtual mannequins have now evolved so that other creatures are catered
> for such as bats, as shown in the picture below. I had originally steered
> away from other creatures because of the difficulty of creating wings from
> only basic objects, however, they came out quite well.
>
> I hope you like this moody scene; please remember there is a lot to improve.
Two questions:
1. What is the spotted red thing on the bat's back?
2. How much realism are you looking for? Land vertebrates have at most 4
limbs to work with. The wings of all flying vertebrates--pterodactyls,
birds, bats--are co-opted arms. (Evolution does this kind of jury-rigging
a lot.) A bat taxi would grab her passenger with her feet.
How far you want to take it is completely up to you, of course. One major
motion picture (either _Antz_ or _A Bug's Life_) featured talking 4-legged
male worker ants.
Post a reply to this message
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Cousin Ricky nous apporta ses lumieres en ce 2007/06/09 19:10:
> "JS" <bos### [at] yahoocouk> wrote:
>> My virtual mannequins have now evolved so that other creatures are catered
>> for such as bats, as shown in the picture below. I had originally steered
>> away from other creatures because of the difficulty of creating wings from
>> only basic objects, however, they came out quite well.
>>
>> I hope you like this moody scene; please remember there is a lot to improve.
>
> Two questions:
>
> 1. What is the spotted red thing on the bat's back?
>
> 2. How much realism are you looking for? Land vertebrates have at most 4
> limbs to work with. The wings of all flying vertebrates--pterodactyls,
> birds, bats--are co-opted arms. (Evolution does this kind of jury-rigging
> a lot.) A bat taxi would grab her passenger with her feet.
>
> How far you want to take it is completely up to you, of course. One major
> motion picture (either _Antz_ or _A Bug's Life_) featured talking 4-legged
> male worker ants.
>
Maybe that kind of "bat" evolved from some wingless insect where a pair of legs
mutated into wings. Further or previous mutations caused the exoskeleton to be
replaced by an internal one...
--
Alain
-------------------------------------------------
You know you've been raytracing too long when quotes about raytracing are making
sence to you.
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Hi.
The 'red spotted thing' is her tail, but thanks for your remarks anyway.
These creatures are half human/half non-human so they do behave human like;
that is, they would use their hands to pick someone up rather than their
feet.
James S.
Post a reply to this message
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