Forum: Fractals


Subject: 400 square meters of Mandelbulb

Lenord opened this issue on Mar 16, 2012 · 8 posts


Lenord posted Fri, 16 March 2012 at 12:16 PM

3.3 Gigapixel mandelbulb image by Mandelwerk/Kraftwerk - 1 month of rendering and two weeks of stitching...

http://mandelwerk.com/


Remember...No matter where you go there you are


Feliciti posted Thu, 22 March 2012 at 11:23 AM

wow impressive !!


KnightWolverine posted Sat, 24 March 2012 at 8:37 AM

I transfered this over to my 52" palsma HD TV using my sons XBox 360 to actually be able to get a real feel of it's actual size as my PC is only 1366 X 768 res...

You should see it Lenord....OMG!!!!!

The clarity is unbelievable buddy!....

If I was to attempt rendering anything that was a gigapixel...let alone 3.3 my PC would let out a scream...followed by a puff of smoke and then shut down....basically telling me.....FU## You!!!....rofl!.....


Lenord posted Sat, 24 March 2012 at 9:18 AM

Mandelwerk/Kraftwerk is one of the most impressive 3D fractalists around, his concept work and Deep explorations are incredible. Huge Renders like that are not so much Computer resource intensive as Time intensive since they are Rendered in Blocks and stitched together in Postwork, still the patience to do something like that is amazing.


Remember...No matter where you go there you are


Danny_G posted Fri, 30 March 2012 at 11:58 AM Online Now!

Thats sick. Thanks for the links Len 

Danny_Gordon
New World Digital Art


greyone posted Sat, 31 March 2012 at 7:53 AM

Wow Len, this is amazing.  I usually render at 3200X1600 and then have to scale way down to fit on the site.  This big is just amazing, but must take a very very long time.


X-PaX posted Sat, 31 March 2012 at 12:04 PM

Very impressive work.

X-PaX

SiteMail

→ [ www.3dspots.de ]   |   [ www.cwhp.de ]


claudia02 posted Fri, 11 May 2012 at 4:30 PM

That would be much more interesting if it were a complex structure,
which fills the whole picture.

Das wäre viel Interessanter, wenn es ein komplexes Gebilde wäre,
was das ganze Bild ausfüllt.