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Who dat ?
This image depicts an American Indian a top a speeding horse.
As this is the day of the height field I thought it was appropriate.
In this case the Hf object, processed in a similar fashion as that
used by Jim Kress, was used in a csg operation on the face of a box.
Everything in the room is lit by indirect lighting and radiosity was
used to help with the overall color of the image. I know it is dark
but it was intentional.
If you go to the home page of Jim Kress you can see the original
image the horse and rider were extracted from. Thanks Jim :)
Comments are invited.
--
Ken Tyler
mailto://tylereng@pacbell.net
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'horse.jpg' (21 KB)
Preview of image 'horse.jpg'
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Ken wrote:
>
> Who dat ?
>
> This image depicts an American Indian a top a speeding horse.
> As this is the day of the height field I thought it was appropriate.
> In this case the Hf object, processed in a similar fashion as that
> used by Jim Kress, was used in a csg operation on the face of a box.
> Everything in the room is lit by indirect lighting and radiosity was
> used to help with the overall color of the image. I know it is dark
> but it was intentional.
>
> If you go to the home page of Jim Kress you can see the original
> image the horse and rider were extracted from. Thanks Jim :)
>
> Comments are invited.
>
> --
> Ken Tyler
>
This method has some very nice possibilities. Jim spoke about a tutorial
of yours. Am I blind? I just can't find it. Or have I overread
something.
It would be really nice to have acces to that information.
TIA,
Marc
--
Marc Schimmler
Post a reply to this message
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Marc Schimmler wrote:
>
>
> This method has some very nice possibilities. Jim spoke about a tutorial
> of yours. Am I blind? I just can't find it. Or have I overread
> something.
>
> It would be really nice to have acces to that information.
>
I'll second that! Where's the tutorial?
Margus
Post a reply to this message
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Margus Ramst wrote:
>
> Marc Schimmler wrote:
> >
> >
> > This method has some very nice possibilities. Jim spoke about a tutorial
> > of yours. Am I blind? I just can't find it. Or have I overread
> > something.
> >
> > It would be really nice to have acces to that information.
> >
>
> I'll second that! Where's the tutorial?
>
> Margus
I just now 10 seconds ago posted it in povray.binaries.tutorials.
Tear it up people !
--
Ken Tyler
mailto://tylereng@pacbell.net
Post a reply to this message
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Very artsy. Reminded me immediately of those TV-top lights in the olden
days, you know, where they were used to ward off evil eye strain.
Using a 16-bit display here makes this appear very different from the
24-bit version also, I'm sure.
Ken wrote:
>
> Who dat ?
>
> This image depicts an American Indian a top a speeding horse.
> As this is the day of the height field I thought it was appropriate.
> In this case the Hf object, processed in a similar fashion as that
> used by Jim Kress, was used in a csg operation on the face of a box.
> Everything in the room is lit by indirect lighting and radiosity was
> used to help with the overall color of the image. I know it is dark
> but it was intentional.
>
> If you go to the home page of Jim Kress you can see the original
> image the horse and rider were extracted from. Thanks Jim :)
>
> Comments are invited.
>
> --
> Ken Tyler
>
> mailto://tylereng@pacbell.net
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> [Image]
--
omniVERSE: beyond the universe
http://members.aol.com/inversez/POVring.htm
mailto:inv### [at] aolcom?PoV
Post a reply to this message
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