Veritas777 opened this issue on Dec 13, 2004 ยท 5 posts
Veritas777 posted Mon, 13 December 2004 at 7:47 PM
Attached Link: http://www.e-onsoftware.com/Community/Spotlight.php?Page=1
Used in creating the illustrations for Reader's Digest World Atlas...Veritas777 posted Mon, 13 December 2004 at 8:07 PM
Attached Link: http://www.3d-art.co.uk/
Also some nice commercial art examples on his website...war2 posted Tue, 14 December 2004 at 4:40 AM
yep i did notice readers digest 2004 world atlas earlier on. and well im not surprised, vue is good enough to be used for commercial projects, especialy now with the vue5 generation
Veritas777 posted Tue, 14 December 2004 at 2:33 PM
I also thought that Nanotyrannus would find it interesting, as it has that "3D look"--well as those who like to render one HUGE 3D file, rather than compositing, like I do. So- render those HUGE 3D files (250 MB), folks- Vue certainly can certainly do it! This Reader's Digest project also gets into the area where World Construction Set once dominated. I own WCS- and I HATE IT! Vue is so much more EASY and FUN...
nanotyrannus posted Tue, 14 December 2004 at 4:02 PM
Yeah, I checked that out on the e-on set a few weeks ago when I first noticed it, very cool stuff to see Vue doing, I can't imagine what another software would try to do with so many polys. I tried opening up a 10m res dem file that was 25 megs in Autodesk Viz 2005 and it got about half way through before screeching to a halt and bombing out. So I cropped it down to a smaller area that was only 5 megs and even though it did actually import it, it was really sluggish to work with. By contrast Vue handles huge poly terrains via it's terrain editor extremely well, I think that's a lot of what makes it possible to do stuff like what the readers digest atlas showed.