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Your image demonstrates a youthful exuberance, a very evident disregard for
conformance, and an insightful dash of surrealism. Interesting.
Well done, Laurent!
GrimDude
vos### [at] arkansasnet
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Nice pic!!!
Cman
--
news.povray.org wrote in message <36e4f912.0@news.povray.org>...
>totally made by hand. Standard shapes, CSG and some maths. Now I will read
>page 2 of povray manual.
>
>
>
>
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Very creative, I think. I like this one a lot.
Dave
news.povray.org wrote in message <36e4f912.0@news.povray.org>...
>totally made by hand. Standard shapes, CSG and some maths. Now I will read
>page 2 of povray manual.
>
>
>
>
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Convinces me of the "artists eye" concept, or "eye of the beholder",
where the person doing the render (or what have you) is apt to see more
of what has been done than another, outsider person is. I came back to
see this again and it actually looked like something, first time it
seemed only abstract.
I've always been fascinated by those art interpreter types that could
see what I wasn't seeing, or vice versa.
"news.povray.org" wrote:
>
> totally made by hand. Standard shapes, CSG and some maths. Now I will read
> page 2 of povray manual.
>
> [Image]
--
omniVERSE: beyond the universe
http://members.aol.com/inversez/POVring.htm
mailto:inv### [at] aolcom?PoV
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Totally agree with what Bob Hughes said:
I've never seen anything like it. The colours are beautifully matched
and merged.
Even if you didn't try. Keep it up!
Cheers (and thanks for this refreshing image)
Steve
Bob Hughes wrote:
>
> Convinces me of the "artists eye" concept, or "eye of the beholder",
> where the person doing the render (or what have you) is apt to see more
> of what has been done than another, outsider person is. I came back to
> see this again and it actually looked like something, first time it
> seemed only abstract.
> I've always been fascinated by those art interpreter types that could
> see what I wasn't seeing, or vice versa.
>
> "news.povray.org" wrote:
> >
> > totally made by hand. Standard shapes, CSG and some maths. Now I will read
> > page 2 of povray manual.
> >
> > [Image]
>
> --
> omniVERSE: beyond the universe
> http://members.aol.com/inversez/POVring.htm
> mailto:inv### [at] aolcom?PoV
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Laurent Bassompierre sez:
> totally made by hand. Standard shapes, CSG and some maths. Now I will read
> page 2 of povray manual.
Very joyful arrangement (or non-arrangement).
Hey, all, if those are POVRay listings in there, did you notice
anything about the indentation?
--
Bob Crispen
cri### [at] hiwaaynet
What a day, what a day, for an auto-da-fe.
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From: laurent bassompierre
Subject: Re: newuser first work : pvengine at work
Date: 11 Mar 1999 02:27:15
Message: <36e77053.0@news.povray.org>
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Thanks a lot.
laurent
>Your image demonstrates a youthful exuberance, a very evident disregard for
>conformance, and an insightful dash of surrealism. Interesting.
>
>Well done, Laurent!
>
>GrimDude
>vos### [at] arkansasnet
>
>
>
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From: laurent bassompierre
Subject: Re: newuser first work : pvengine at work
Date: 11 Mar 1999 02:36:40
Message: <36e77288.0@news.povray.org>
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My english is too poor to understand all what you have write. But i'm
astonished that my first work cause so many reactions. I never paint or draw
anything. I use POVRAY because it can do it for me.
thanks a lot
laurent bassompierre
>Convinces me of the "artists eye" concept, or "eye of the beholder",
>where the person doing the render (or what have you) is apt to see more
>of what has been done than another, outsider person is. I came back to
>see this again and it actually looked like something, first time it
>seemed only abstract.
>I've always been fascinated by those art interpreter types that could
>see what I wasn't seeing, or vice versa.
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From: laurent bassompierre
Subject: Re: newuser first work : pvengine at work
Date: 11 Mar 1999 02:41:05
Message: <36e77391.0@news.povray.org>
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Sorry, but i don't understand your question. I'm french and altavista don't
help me a lot to translate it.
Thanks
Laurent BASSOMPIERRE
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de
travers la
machine de pvengine.
ne choisirai pas ici, la plupart du temps parce qu'il y a probablement
chaque ligne. LOL
Courtesy AltaVista babelfish translator:
The " impression " is the space used before each line in the standard
file of
sequence (paper) which you had in the image to put through the machine
of
pvengine.
A joke (or funny?) about someone else I will not choose here, most of
the time because there are probably others too and each one changes as
for their
own line space before each line. LOL
And finally what I really said:
The "indentation" is the space used before each line in the script file
(paper) you had in the picture to put through the pvengine machine.
A joke (or funny?) concerning someone else I will not single out here,
mostly because there are probably others too and everyone varies as to
their own spacing before each line. LOL
laurent bassompierre wrote:
>
> Sorry, but i don't understand your question. I'm french and altavista don't
> help me a lot to translate it.
> Thanks
> Laurent BASSOMPIERRE
--
omniVERSE: beyond the universe
http://members.aol.com/inversez/POVring.htm
mailto:inv### [at] aolcom?PoV
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