Thu, Oct 3, 2:24 PM CDT

Port Galileo

Bryce Science Fiction posted on Sep 07, 2008
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Description


One rendering this weekend. I've done Europa, so here's Ganymede. Some reuse on this one: another variation on my vertical lander, first used in Europa Landing and then modified for Damascus Sulci, and here again, another modification. All Bryce but the sig. (Although Vue 6 Infinite came in the mail on Friday... looks very promising - especially for worlds with planets and atmospheres... now, if only I can import my Bryce models). Note on the lighting: The sun is almost opposite the camera at 45 degrees above the horizon. I know the ground looks too bright, but that's the way it came out. A strength 1 ranged light behind the camera gives a "ground glow" effect from distant terrain, but that's not brightening the ground hardly at all. But it is brighter than I thought it would be, even with the light in the tower and the substantial engine glow. Thanks for your comments on previous images. The story for this one is lifted from the draft of the novel I'm trying to write: --- Port Galileo was one of the oldest settlements on Ganymede and currently the largest. The city sat on a cratered plain on the leading side of the moon, with Jupiter forever on the west horizon. Like all Jovian moon settlements, it was mostly underground, protected from the cold and radiation by tons of regolith. With one eye closed, Walker watched the landing on the shuttle's public repeater. The vertical landing craft hovered into position above a flattened dome whose eight teeth-like segments peeled back to reveal a sunken yellow-lit landing bay. The pilot nailed the landing, hardly sending a shiver through the hull, and the platform retracted as the dome sealed above them. The five landing pads weren't far from the main settlement areas. They walked down a long rounded corridor marked "Sky Dome", past several blast doors, faded wall advertisements and assorted hawkers into a large metal and plastic lobby ringed with ramps and tubes. Walker watched the crowds. The proportion of people with Benson's Syndrome was lower than had been fifteen years before, but the signs of poverty still remained. On Mars, most people had access to good health care and cosmetic biosculpting. The "ugly" Martians he'd met or seen were that way out of choice. At Port Galileo, many in the crowd had blemished faces, scars, weight problems, even crude cybernetic limbs. It reminded him of Earth. He'd grown up in Mombasa. The city itself, like so many island metropolises before it: New York, Hong Kong, Singapore, was wealthy enough, a jewel of high-rises, bridges and docks rising amidst a mainland of industrial and residential regions, slowly fading to farmland and ring roads. But in his youth, he'd traveled north of the equator, and there, the chaos and destruction of the Succession War had never healed. Along the Sahel and up the Nile, cities, shanties and villages sprouted from ruins and wasted farmlands. He'd seen hunger and disease and deformity much worse than even the most remote Solar outpost. Of course, had any distant settlement suffered the collapse that still affected large portions of the Earth, everyone would have died long ago. There were places like that, he knew, dead settlements from the Belt to the Kuiper, some abandoned, others silent tombs. There were even some like that on Ganymede and the other Jovian moons. He'd seen them. --26 April 2519, Port Galileo, Ganymede.

Comments (17)


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Seaview123

10:50PM | Sun, 07 September 2008

Your work is always on the cutting edge of sci-fi, and I really enjoy reading your companion stories. Very good work on this image.

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DPW

10:53PM | Sun, 07 September 2008

Love the lighting. I think it works with the ground that bright, honestly.

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e-brink

11:27PM | Sun, 07 September 2008

A fantastic scene. Love the contrasting lighting. Can't wait to see your work in Vue.

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grafikeer

12:39AM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Great image...love the lighting under the craft,as well as the lighting in the scene...great modelling and composition!

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rj001

7:52AM | Mon, 08 September 2008

nice work again, classic image, good atmosphere

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thecytron

8:56AM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Great composition!

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Mondwin

9:47AM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Great light and splendid job...bravissimo!:DDD.Hugsxx

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lordgoron

3:07PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Very good scifi render, the lighting looks realistic

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jrcejaspulido

4:34PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Very "convincing" scifi scene. The work with the light is great.

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Rutra

5:45PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Great modelling, lighting and composition. I like the textures as well. And... welcome to Vue! :-) You'll have fun!

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timspfd

7:04PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Great retro-futuristic look to it, the lighting is nicely done.

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kjer_99

11:05PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Oh, you're going to love Vue 6! Sorry to break the news, but your Bryce models are useless for anything other than Bryce. However, you can directly import Poser models and scenes into Vue, which is pretty handy. Any models that you improted into Bryce probably will import into Vue as well. Have fun!!

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artgum

11:22PM | Mon, 08 September 2008

Excellent lighting.

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Bambam131

11:06PM | Tue, 09 September 2008

You have a wonderful imagination and this picture is proof, excellent mood and atmosphere (or lack of)..;-) You are one of my favorite artist here and your pictures alway inspires! Excellent my friend! Cheers, David PS: I hope to have some new work out soon

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gmvgmvgmv

4:28AM | Thu, 11 September 2008

Really effective use of light in this one. Fine work!

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alltheoriginalnames

10:58PM | Sat, 27 September 2008

Very cool piece and great backstory to go with it, sets up the piece perfectly

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SIGMAWORLD

8:08PM | Sun, 08 March 2009

Excellent!


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