Forum: Bryce


Subject: Challenge WIP

chohole opened this issue on Jun 13, 2006 ยท 7 posts


chohole posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 7:16 AM

Seems like a good time to take cover in a cave.

From the bryce sky lab.

It's not quite right, though

Any C&C please.

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



RodsArt posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 10:53 AM

Skies have always been a bit annoying to me, almost seems like I can't get it right and I keep tweaking, then I change it, then tweak it more.

This looks good, I like the amount of light coming into the cave. Ultimately you have to be happy with it. Save the file as a different file name......then, change the sky & TWEAK IT a little. LOL

Again, nice work & good luck.

___
Ockham's razor- It's that simple


chohole posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 12:00 PM

I think what is annoying me is the colour I have on the underside of the cumulus clouds. Every dial I have is tweaked to the blue side of grey, and yet I am getting a reddish colour. Even tweaking the colour perspective has no effect.

It's basically the same problem I was having when I was trying to get bryce to render me a grey scale monochrome, but at least I could remedy that in postwork, don't think I can with this one.

Plus of course, being me, I now want to add details, put someone or something in the cave etc.

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



danamo posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 5:31 PM

I know you're not satisfied with it yet, but what you have here so far is very nicely done. i like it!


Ang25 posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 5:51 PM

I agree, its lovely! Putting more in the scene might take away from the sky.


bikermouse posted Tue, 13 June 2006 at 9:18 PM

That's the way to go ! It looks great ! ! !


chohole posted Wed, 14 June 2006 at 6:19 AM

How's about I do one for me and one for the challenge

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."