Here is the stacks w/ a few scaled and translated in the center
structure to give it the illusion of mass to some some kind...
Any artistic suggestions...?
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From: Peter Warren
Subject: Re: Stacker Again
Date: 2 Jan 2000 04:03:40
Message: <386f146c@news.povray.org>
I think it still looks too thin if you are trying to make it
look like a mountain.
Possibly because of the regularity of the openings.
However if it was a space ship it would be just
about ready to take off!
Peter
From: omniVERSE
Subject: Re: Stacker Again
Date: 2 Jan 2000 10:12:03
Message: <386f6ac3@news.povray.org>
The scale isn't establishable I think. If it only had some low clouds or
ground fog it might help to tell what size it is, or any other thing that
compares against it.
Bob
"ryan mooney" <rdm### [at] earthlinknet> wrote in message
news:386D99AA.A836569C@earthlink.net...
> Here is the stacks w/ a few scaled and translated in the center> structure to give it the illusion of mass to some some kind...> Any artistic suggestions...?> ------------------------------------------------------------------------>
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Any ideas on how to make it more structured and more solid around the
openings.
besides changing the entire structure i'm stuck on this one...???
Peter Warren wrote:
> I think it still looks too thin if you are trying to make it> look like a mountain.> Possibly because of the regularity of the openings.> However if it was a space ship it would be just> about ready to take off!>> Peter
On Mon, 3 Jan 2000 10:12:24 -0500, "Bill DeWitt"
<the### [at] earthlinknet> wrote:
>>I just can't read this subject title without thinking about the Disk>Compression utility that was popular when a large HD was 40 Megs.
Oh glorious days of the past! Running Windows on a 286/12/640kb/20MB
over Stacker 3.1 and playing with PhotoStyler 2.0... it took a good
two hours to motion blur a 320x200 grayscale image. <sigh> Such fond
memories...
Peter Popov
pet### [at] usanet
ICQ: 15002700