Thank you for visiting my Homepage. The creatures you see throughout my gallery are available to buy at www.thecentrevale.com/shop/I have been creating 3D Art since early 2005, using Bryce, Poser and more recently Vue. I was so impressed when I first saw 3D artwork on the Internet that I had to give it a go. So, I created images for the High Fantasy Trilogy that I wrote, which includes immense Beings of Planetary proportions, monsters, magic and much more. If you enjoyed The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, then The Centre Vale Trilogy is well worth a look.
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The first book can be read for free at www.thecentrevale.com
To read great reviews, please visit www.free-ebooks.net/ebook/The-Heart-of-Tarkon
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Wishing you well with your own creative works.
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Stephen Meakin
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Comments (8)
GSGALAXY
Really an impressive architecture and an interesting lighting - real good Bryce job ! The "leaning" towers are just produced by the POV and mainly by the chosen focal length, i would guess - the greater the focal length, the more you will get a fisheye effect - but it definitely adds to the image look and feel - keep it that way !
evinrude
That's a great fortress!
supermarioART
Splendid building and fantastic sky!!!
aliensprog
Cool piece!!!! Like the coloured trees either side. Adds a fantasy feel to it!!!!!
Druidstorm
An outstanding image that reminds my of some of the buildings in the game "Oblivion". Your work is very beautiful friend, bravo!!!...:))
IO4
I hadn't even noticed the towers were leaning. I think it adds to the overall feeling of great scale of the building. Splendind work.
kjer_99
I don't see the "leaning"--which is minimal here anyway--as a problem. Just gives stronger sense of the buildings' height. One way to cure the "leaning" in Bryce is too simply place the camera much farther away and then simply click the "+" button until it is back to where you want it.
e-brink
I actually think the 'leaning' you talk about can give a much more dramatic effect and is not a bad thing. If you use a wide angle lens... say 28mm and move the camera inwards the effects can be stunning. Removing unwanted perspective from buildings to make them unnaturally upright and 'true' is usually used is technical illustrations and architectural work and for this it has been traditional to use plate cameras with back-swing. You can also achieve it in photoshop now. I love perspective though... it's not a fault at all! Your picture as it is is very good indeed!