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Op 29/04/2021 om 17:56 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> alright. Getting tired after a day of tweaking.
>
> glad you did though, "Flanders Gray (tm)" looks ready for turning into kitchen
> worktops. :-) (am interested to see it being used other than in a
> demo/reference image)
>
I certainly agree with that. something is planned in that way.
--
Thomas
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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Op 29/04/2021 om 17:56 schreef jr:
> > ... (am interested to see it being used other than in a
> > demo/reference image)
> >
> I certainly agree with that. something is planned in that way.
personally, I'd love something .. surreal/"strange". like a space station, or
perhaps that natty pre-war flatbed truck you used before, modelled in various
granites. :-)
regards, jr.
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Op 1-5-2021 om 09:40 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> Op 29/04/2021 om 17:56 schreef jr:
>>> ... (am interested to see it being used other than in a
>>> demo/reference image)
>>>
>> I certainly agree with that. something is planned in that way.
>
> personally, I'd love something .. surreal/"strange". like a space station, or
> perhaps that natty pre-war flatbed truck you used before, modelled in various
> granites. :-)
>
Oh lol! That last one would be interesting! I shall see what I can do.
I was thinking, among other things, about the El Capitan half dome...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Capitan
Note that granitic landscapes/formations look rather featureless as far
as textures are concerned. They have no/little internal layering, and
weathering is mostly 'rounding' the rocks.
--
Thomas
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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Op 1-5-2021 om 09:40 schreef jr:
> > Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> >> Op 29/04/2021 om 17:56 schreef jr:
> >>> ... (am interested to see it being used other than in a
> >>> demo/reference image)
> >>>
> >> I certainly agree with that. something is planned in that way.
> >
> > personally, I'd love something .. surreal/"strange". like a space station, or
incongruous rather than strange.
> > perhaps that natty pre-war flatbed truck you used before, modelled in various
> > granites. :-)
> >
> Oh lol! That last one would be interesting! I shall see what I can do.
uh, nice.
> I was thinking, among other things, about the El Capitan half dome...
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Capitan
>
> Note that granitic landscapes/formations look rather featureless as far
> as textures are concerned. They have no/little internal layering, and
> weathering is mostly 'rounding' the rocks.
had not heard of 'El Capitan' before. 900+ metres of sheer cliff, just .. wow.
cannot really imagine, but feel one would feel distinctly ant-sized standing at
its base. (America, huh? _everything_ is big in America! :-))
regards, jr.
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Op 01/05/2021 om 17:22 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> I was thinking, among other things, about the El Capitan half dome...
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Capitan
>>
>> Note that granitic landscapes/formations look rather featureless as far
>> as textures are concerned. They have no/little internal layering, and
>> weathering is mostly 'rounding' the rocks.
>
> had not heard of 'El Capitan' before. 900+ metres of sheer cliff, just .. wow.
> cannot really imagine, but feel one would feel distinctly ant-sized standing at
> its base. (America, huh? _everything_ is big in America! :-))
>
Closer to home (Europe) the cores of the Alps are granites. Bretagne,
Scandinavia and Scotland are also ancient mountain range cores were
granites are common.
--
Thomas
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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Op 01/05/2021 om 17:22 schreef jr:
> > ...
> Closer to home (Europe) the cores of the Alps are granites. Bretagne,
> Scandinavia and Scotland are also ancient mountain range cores were
> granites are common.
in Aberdeen it's in the "moniker" - "granite city".
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen#Landmarks>
regards, jr.
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Op 2-5-2021 om 11:10 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> Op 01/05/2021 om 17:22 schreef jr:
>>> ...
>> Closer to home (Europe) the cores of the Alps are granites. Bretagne,
>> Scandinavia and Scotland are also ancient mountain range cores were
>> granites are common.
>
> in Aberdeen it's in the "moniker" - "granite city".
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen#Landmarks>
>
I didn't know that :-)
You may be interested, like others, now that we are concentrating on
granites (and other rocks) as used in monuments, by the following text I
came across on the web today:
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/earth-sciences/sites/earth-sciences/files/earth_sciences_geotrail_graveyard_geology.pdf
Very instructive reading indeed.
--
Thomas
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Op 30-4-2021 om 19:57 schreef Bald Eagle:
> Have you tried doing a sequence of objects, with changing smooth-step thresholds
> to see what effect that has? There's also the amount of turbulence applied
> which will affect how the underlying pattern looks.
>
Attached a set of step noise patterned granites. Variations of the
turbulence value just changes the distribution of the different grains.
Most interesting is the use (1) of the turbulence within a warp{}
pattern and (2) the use of, especially, octaves, lambda, and omega
values. Thus, the two last renders on the bottom row, produce the best
granite pattern, imo.
--
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'stepnoise_granites.jpg' (295 KB)
Preview of image 'stepnoise_granites.jpg'
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Finally, using a blending technique developed by Tekno Frannansa, The
attached granite, based on the latest preceding one, looks also the most
natural!
--
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'dakotagrains_test_sn7.jpg' (29 KB)
Preview of image 'dakotagrains_test_sn7.jpg'
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For your judgment again.
A weathered, granite, boulder has been hit at and a piece broke off.
Inside: the latest version with warp {turbulence Turbulence octaves 2
lambda 1 omega 2}
Outside: the blurred/blended version of the above
--
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'granitetest.jpg' (85 KB)
Preview of image 'granitetest.jpg'
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