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On 17/08/12 00:55, Robert McGregor wrote:
> And here is just the final comp
> -------------------------------------------------
> www.McGregorFineArt.com
>
Amazing... and it could do as Friday Abstract, too. ;)
My only "complaint" is that my brain expects more focal blur there,
perhaps because I know the scale is very small.
--
Jaime
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Great image, I especially like the green whatever-that-is-helix.
I'll be sure to check the cover when visiting the library ;)
The only thing I wondered is if the illumination might be too bland.
As far as I understand the process it is perfectly diffuse AO/radiosity
(is the model itself emissive?). Some harder shadows might increase the
perception of depth and 3d structure. Especially the blue "heads" feel
a bit surreal to me (which can of course be a good thing, too).
I realize of course that actual light would just diffract like hell
instead of giving any sort of shadow, but then actual light wouldn't
give you this image anyway ;)
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More than excellent indeed. I hope this image will make it to the
Science cover.
Thomas
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Maybe one small comment: those yellow objects all seem to twist in an
identical way. Is this intentional or is it just the result of instancing?
Thomas
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Jaime Vives Piqueres <jai### [at] ignorancia org> wrote:
>
> Amazing... and it could do as Friday Abstract, too. ;)
>
> My only "complaint" is that my brain expects more focal blur there,
> perhaps because I know the scale is very small.
Thank you, sir :)
I agree that the focal blur should probably be much greater, but I kept it
subtle; the researchers wanted the structure of the proteins to not "get lost."
-------------------------------------------------
www.McGregorFineArt.com
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Christian Froeschlin <chr### [at] chrfr de> wrote:
> Great image, I especially like the green whatever-that-is-helix.
>
> I'll be sure to check the cover when visiting the library ;)
>
> The only thing I wondered is if the illumination might be too bland.
> As far as I understand the process it is perfectly diffuse AO/radiosity
> (is the model itself emissive?). Some harder shadows might increase the
> perception of depth and 3d structure. Especially the blue "heads" feel
> a bit surreal to me (which can of course be a good thing, too).
>
> I realize of course that actual light would just diffract like hell
> instead of giving any sort of shadow, but then actual light wouldn't
> give you this image anyway ;)
Thanks Christian. The green helix is actin. As for the lighting, most EM images
that I've seen have more of an ambient occlusion shading to them, so I chose to
use three subtle shadowless lights and an EXR environment, relying on the
ambient occlusion pass for the darker detail (and getting slightly faster render
times). The models are not emmisive, but the subsurface pass adds what I felt
was just the right amount of "glowiness."
-------------------------------------------------
www.McGregorFineArt.com
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Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degroot org> wrote:
> More than excellent indeed. I hope this image will make it to the
> Science cover.
Thanks Thomas, me too!
> Maybe one small comment: those yellow objects all seem to twist in an
> identical way. Is this intentional or is it just the result of instancing?
It is instancing, yes. Those were the last parts that I worked on and I had
planned to make the red stalks be more randomized and twisted, flexing in
various ways as if by Brownian motion in an aqueous solution. But I was already
approching deadline (imagine that!) and had to deal with a drive crash, replace
& restore that took far too long. So I finally just had to go with it as-is.
-------------------------------------------------
www.McGregorFineArt.com
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On 16/08/2012 11:55 PM, Robert McGregor wrote:
> And here is just the final comp
> -------------------------------------------------
> www.McGregorFineArt.com
>
It is really quite beautiful. With a good story I could mistake it for a
railway, an alien one of course. ;-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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Stephen <mcavoys_at@aoldotcom> wrote:
> On 16/08/2012 11:55 PM, Robert McGregor wrote:
> > And here is just the final comp
> > -------------------------------------------------
> > www.McGregorFineArt.com
> >
>
> It is really quite beautiful. With a good story I could mistake it for a
> railway, an alien one of course. ;-)
>
> --
> Regards
> Stephen
Thanks Stephen :)
I had started a bizarro railway shot for TC-TRC but hadn't gotten far when this
protein complex came my way, and it took far longer than I expected, especially
the final render at 3300 x 4400 px.
While I appreciate the hint, I wouldn't feel right about just "calling" it a
railway... besides, I thought the entries were closed already!
Well, according to the ticker I still have 3 hours, I suppose I can do a little
more work and post my half finished bizarro railway after all.
Cheers,
Rob
-------------------------------------------------
www.McGregorFineArt.com
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On 17/08/2012 9:59 PM, Robert McGregor wrote:
> Stephen <mcavoys_at@aoldotcom> wrote:
>> It is really quite beautiful. With a good story I could mistake it for a
>> railway, an alien one of course. ;-)
>>
>
> Thanks Stephen :)
>
It is true.
> I had started a bizarro railway shot for TC-TRC but hadn't gotten far when this
> protein complex came my way, and it took far longer than I expected, especially
> the final render at 3300 x 4400 px.
>
> While I appreciate the hint, I wouldn't feel right about just "calling" it a
> railway... besides, I thought the entries were closed already!
>
I know I was just drumming up custom ;-)
The closing date confuses me too.
> Well, according to the ticker I still have 3 hours, I suppose I can do a little
> more work and post my half finished bizarro railway after all.
>
Nice one. If you ever get round to finishing it please post the result. :-D
--
Regards
Stephen
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