Steeleyes101 opened this issue on Jan 29, 2004 ยท 7 posts
Steeleyes101 posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 1:29 PM
pogmahone posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 1:37 PM
I'm not a great 2d person, but it looks to me like you have so many colours in the composition that they cancel each other out. I like how vibrant the central building is, think it would have a lot more impact if everything else was toned down - particularly the swathes of flowers in front of it, which draw your eye as soon as you look at the image. Sometimes, maybe less is more? The lighting might look terrific if the the image wasn't so busy.
danamo posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 3:26 PM
I'd recommend that you save your render as a TIF, bitmap, or if you're on a Mac, as a pict, and then use an image editor(PSP, PhotoShop, etc.) to convert your image to a .jpeg. Bryce's native .jpeg compression leaves a lot to be desired and I think you'll find that you can really improve the appearance of your uploads if you use another prog to handle the conversion. I almost always use premium, or fine art antialiasing because I find that it can enhance many fine details and textures that might not show up otherwise, but that's just my experience.
burgi posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 3:36 PM
Attached Link: File Compression
the effect you described is called pixellation. it is a result of JPEG compression. To get the tiny file sizes, when saving the computer looks at the each pixel and the surrounding ones then averages out the colour. this means that less colour information is saved in the file (hence the smaller size). to combat this effect save your renders as TIFFs. more information on file compression at: http://computer.howstuffworks.com/file-compression.htmburgi posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 3:41 PM
damn! cross posted!
electroglyph posted Thu, 29 January 2004 at 4:57 PM
MuddyGrub posted Fri, 30 January 2004 at 2:07 AM
Wow, I really love the detail. The colors are so vibrant. Very beautiful. I think this deserves an additional render too. Leave out the poser figures and crop out most of the lower water... panoramic perfection!