Forum Moderators: TheBryster
Bryce F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 4:28 pm)
I used to see F-18's going around like this when I used to live in Hampton, Virginia. So it's really not that far off from being realistic. If anything is off it's the lighting on the jet when compared to the background clouds. (Darker perhaps?) They look smallish in photos too. It wouldn't hurt to use a hint of a dark exhaust trail. I think it could be better composition-wise. (If you're going to have the jet, why not make it the subject and get in closer?)
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On myyoure quite welcome Ang and thanks for the credit! I love seeing what other people do with my models. I get the illusion as if someone was casually walking by with camera in hand when all of a sudden they turn and see an aircraft going through maneuvers and clicked a picture and caught the moment frozen in time. No posing, just instant reflex, just as a photograph would be taken in the spur of the moment with little opportunity on the photographers part for artistic composition, one of those gotcha moments. I think its great that you as an artist, can capture and deliver that moment. Missing that centrality of compositional focus, esthetically speaking, its as beautiful as any warplane going through maneuvers from a distance would be. If on the other hand you depicted the warplane up close and personal, say, breaking the sound barrier, just barely skimming over the oceans surface displacing and spewing mountains of water in its wake, you would then get a different reaction. I see no problem with the birds since everyone knows intuitively that birds are smaller than planes and to see them there only means that they are much closer to the viewer than the plane is. Perhaps they were startled by the buzzing of the jet, or the breaking of the sound barrier. The trees and the sky work is fantastic and really lends credibility to the jet, since any aircraft aficionado would instantly know that such an aircraft doesnt really exist. If you wanted contrails then perhaps blending some narrow, slender cylinders with some transparent cloud texture as a contrail behind the wings and tail is possible, that is, if you really wanted contrails but I think that gets a bit tricky. I think the afterburner flame looks fine given the color of the sky for contrast, they often have a ting of blue in it, just a smidgen but I dont think its necessary. You could, you know, if you werent aware, ungroup the model in Bryce and subtract, or add for that matter, any piece you want. I think it looks good as is and comes quite close to the illusion of being photorealistic if that is, and I think it is what you were after.
Actually, Ang, you're right to delete the con-trail. Con-trails (Condensation trails, AKA vapour-trails) don't usually appear til the aircraft is high enough that air-temperature has dropped considerably, thus cooling the water vapour from the exhaust. The same thing happens with car exhaust - you don't see it unless the weather is cold. And Jet engines expel water vapour at a much higher temperature...:-)) Nice pic!! Cheers, (just showing off...) Diolma
I liked post #6 best. This looks like a plane in trouble, just been hit by an AA missile but not yet got to the point of the big explosion. You should see these buggers over my house on tuesdays and thursdays, the only difference being that the RAF doesn't use these planes. BTW - I've yet to see engine exhaust flares during the day on the RAF planes - from any angle...... just my 0.02p. Well done Ang! Sure beats my condom!
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All the Woes of a World by Jonathan Icknield aka The Bryster
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Not all vapor trails are high altitude or cold weather... On a day with high enough humidity condensation trails can show up just above sea level. All it takes is a pressure differential big enough over the surface of aircraft, usually seen in the turbulent areas at the wingtips. (Mostly seen when an aircraft is going very fast or pulling a hard manuever.) Low altitude vapor trails usually have nothing to do with engine exhaust and is just ambient moisture being condensed from the air. The noticable difference is the low altitude ones usually dissappate almost as soon as they are formed and wouldn't trail very far from the aircraft. The high altitude thing only applies to vapor trails that stay long after the aircraft has departed. In which case the jet exhaust explanation applies. BTW, the exhaust trail I suggested earlier isn't a condensation trail. Just some soot particles. You cold easily postwork it and make the sky just a tint darker where it would follow the aircraft. If you look at some photos you'll see what I mean.
Your friendly neighborhood Wings3D nut.
Also feel free to browse my freebies at ShareCG.
There might be something worth downloading.
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