LunarTick opened this issue on Nov 19, 2004 ยท 8 posts
LunarTick posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 6:59 PM
Well here i am again needing help from you Bryce experts.
I want to place more than one planet in an image and make them look like they are a distance from the camera. Now don't go getting to technical on my, i'm not good at this bryce stuff yet.
Message edited on: 11/19/2004 19:01
danamo posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 7:31 PM
Attached Link: http://www.petersharpe.com/Tutorials.htm
You might want to check out this tut first, if you already haven't. I don't claim to be an "expert" but if this doesn't answer your question come on back and we'll see if we can help you achieve the effect you desire.RodsArt posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 7:32 PM
Yeah that's a great tut!!
___
Ockham's razor- It's that simple
LunarTick posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 8:03 PM
thanks for the link to that tut danamo. it will help me with what i want to do in my next wip :)
Erlik posted Sat, 20 November 2004 at 3:26 PM
Another way is to create a picture of your planet (or crescent planet) in Photoshop. for instance, with LunarCell or something similar. Then create a b/w mask and apply the planet and the mask on a 2D face. Repeat as much as you like. Position wherever you like. You know about these links, right? http://gw.marketingden.com/planets/ http://www.cortland.edu/flteach/civ/DavidWeb/resources.htm Planet texture maps.
-- erlik
MatCreator posted Sat, 20 November 2004 at 8:58 PM
something i noticed... mr. sharpe says to "...switch off receive shadows"... can we actually turn off shadows for different objects in the scene?!? this is totally new info to me that could be of great use.
There are 3 kinds of people in the
world. Those that can count, and those that can't..
danamo posted Sat, 20 November 2004 at 9:44 PM
Message edited on: 11/20/2004 21:45
MatCreator posted Sun, 21 November 2004 at 3:26 AM