Forum Moderators: TheBryster
Bryce F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 4:12 am)
Can't really think of anything wrong with it. Only thing is I can't really make out Lord Foul and maybe tone down the specularity on the skin of the figures, they look wet. I have mixed feelings about those books. On one hand I liked them and on the other I thought Thomas was an absolute fool with all that power. :) Seems there are lots of people getting into recreating scenes from books. Hobbit with the Shanara series, you with Thomas Covenant and myself with Dragonriders of Pern.
The perspective is great and you captured his tortured look remarkedly well, I have to agree with Aldaron, they do look wet. Also the reflection on his neck from the ring is a tad bright IMHO... I am rereading those books, just started on the Illearth war yesterday. Every notice how Donaldson over describes everything? Night is always hanging over their heads like a ravening Ur-Vile waiting to pounce or the river is lurking like gibbering madness or some such...
Thanks for the comments so far. Aldaron / tmac87 - yes, I intended the figures to look wet (a bit of explanation on my part is necessary, I think!) They are standing in the desert, and the Sunbane is rising, making the heat interolerable, hence the sweat. Foul is rising from the red Sunbane into the blue morning sky. Also, the puncture wounds on Covenant's arm are where he was bitten by Marid.
Although I agree about the specularity and clouds ( a slight toning down and tweak), I had to stop by to add a comment.
tuttle, this image has amazing power and emotion emminating from it! You really have captured quite a remarkable moment in time. Everytime I view it, I find myself noticing another detail. All of it adds up to an extraordinary image I look forward to seeing upon its completion.
Thanks for posting this!
~Arry
I dare you, while there is still time, to have a magnificent obsession. --William Danforth
Returning the favor.... of your kind critique for my work.
I am not familar with the story if that is important to what is being shown...
The front lead character is very well done. The tallest character, and the two on the right, in the back is not done up to that same high standard though. Jpeg compression has something to do with it, but adding some extra directional lighting, especially on the dark skin, would better show the physique details. An option, to see how it works, would also have the tallest character having his head turned more toward the viewer. Like the heavy character's head being opposite that of the cloud... and I like how the head in the clouds turned out.
Nit picking of course. It's evident that you know what you wish to portray.
Just something to consider...
If you are interested in changing the composition, would suggest not leaving the empty spacing on the right side, as the previous posting suggested. This does not have the look to me in being intended to hold text, which could be used there...
Want to keep the viewer's eyes framed into your scene, not flow from the top off the image at mid right, i would assume.
Another suggestion would be to leave the heavy fellow back about where he is, with head juxaposed against the cloud's. The remaining characters, with the tallest still in the rear but angled more towards the viewer, and closer to the right edge, body facing inward. Remaining characters more coming forward - with the dark skin one the closest and body cantered so that you can more easier get away with adding the highlights you mentioned. Even the darkest skin, when there is sweat, is going to give off highlights - and at least personally - finding satisfactory means of keeping details apparent with dark textures is a difficult trick to pull off. Have to over compensate - because jpeg conversion will undo just about anything else that's done...
Still applaud the work done on lead character and cloud. Hope this post will give something to think on,
best, hewsan
Yeah, composition is a hellish subject to learn - there are just no set rules! It's a lot worse for book covers, etc. (I should be so lucky!) because there the consideration of the title, the author's name, the blurb on the back, the wording on the spine, and everything has to fit in. Ah, well, learning all the time! But I'm leaving this image as it is, now, and concentrating on my Rendo Mag Competition entry, which I shall start on Saturday. I urge everyone to enter, and judging by the unnervingly high standard of entries so far, it will be good practice for the GURU Competition! Thanks again for the advice!
tuttle, Thomas Covenant - was he the non-beliecer or the un=believer? It's been so long I can't remember. Lighting - darker? background characters - a little closer? camera angle - slightly more upward? maybe raise the eyebrows on TC and open his mouth a little more. THe cloud figure doesn't stand out in the render as well as it should? - TJ
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Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/viewed.ez?galleryid=258541
For the first time, and seeing everyone's doing it, I'm posting an image here for virulent critique. I've only posted a very small version here (and it does lose something in translation!). The gallery link leads to a bigger one. The original is 960x1600. A study of Thomas Covenant (The Covenant Chronicles - Stephen R Donaldson) sometime after he escaped the Clave, killing many people in the process. From left to right, Thomas Covenant, Pitchwife, Linden Avery, Vain, The First (rear) and Brinn. Lord Foul, of course, is in the clouds. Lit with light cage and 2 HDRI hemispheres - and a few other lights. All clothing and hair done with mouse in post, using Photopaint 9. Covenant's shirt was from a digital photo I took of my own horrendous atire, cloned, mapped and shaded by hand. No compositing or layering, the basic image was rendered as-is, with the 2nd HDRI hemisphere causing the distance effect for Lord Foul. Foul himself is a Poser head mapped with several altitude transparency gradients and volumetric cloud mats. Render time about 3 hrs. Postwork - 6 hrs. So, do your worst. Honest opinions only, please, whatever they may be! ;)