Chaos Corona Forum
General Category => Gallery => Topic started by: ASaarnak on 2018-12-18, 01:32:17
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Hello!
This is a personal project I finished a while ago right before going to travel in SE Asia. I´m back now (with too many ideas to work on in 3D) and sharing this image.
The boys are inspired by Piotr Jabłoński´s Tomcat series which I´ve enjoyed for a long time. All his work is pure inspiration.
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Love it, mate!
Great to see something entirely original here
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Love it, mate!
Great to see something entirely original here
Thanks!
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But when you resize the window with the picture, somewhere in the middle-left, you get moire effect because the lines are a little too straight. I don't think you would get moire from natural lines of wheat.
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Very nice, did the corona scatter at this scale kill your system or are you using texturing for the background fields?
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But when you resize the window with the picture, somewhere in the middle-left, you get moire effect because the lines are a little too straight. I don't think you would get moire from natural lines of wheat.
Wheat is planted in quite straight distinct lines actually, but moire effect happens in my image because I intentionally made my background wheat forest more sparse to make lines visible. In the real world, these lines would be all mixed together this far.
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Very nice, did the corona scatter at this scale kill your system or are you using texturing for the background fields?
It´s all rendered. I used different forest objects for fore-, mid and background, it was easier to manage this way. It was fine with my 64gb ram, although I didn´t optimize much. I made wheat myself with Growfx and it was too tempting to make a lot of different objects just by clicking new seed number. I made 20+ different wheat objects which all are about 200K polys. I optimized background objects down to about 50K polys. I think it would have been totally fine with maybe 2-4 usual wheats, 2 bended wheats for the edge of the path and 2 harvested wheats. There´s only under 7M items in forest objects actually.