Wed, Nov 20, 1:19 AM CST

Coral Sea- May 1942

Vue Military posted on Apr 24, 2012
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


May the 4th be with you... May 4th 1942. The rendezvous of Task Force 11 (USS Lexington and her escorts ) with Task Force 44 (heavy cruisers HMAS Australia and USS Chicago, light cruiser HMAS Hobart and three destroyers) during the early jostling before the carrier battle broke out. Ok... maybe there weren't any Fletcher-class destroyers at the Coral Sea Battle... Admiral Fletcher might have been impressed though! Rendered in Vue 8 Esprit Assets USS Lexington (Alicefromlake)- transparency map applied to the material to hide the turrets (replaced with AA shortly before the battle). TBD and F4F aircraft on flight deck - these are the BeyondVR freebies of course (Renderosity/ShareCG), I've added early 1942 textures. WW2 destroyer (RPublishing) -I'm thinking that maybe Lady Lex never crossed paths with this advanced destroyer class... but the BeyondVR destroyer still looks the part...? HMAS Australia- my model.

Comments (12)


)

T.Rex

6:36AM | Tue, 24 April 2012

Beautifully done image - nearly a photo. The Australia in the left background - you made it? Could we get a close-up image sometime? Those were some dreadful battles - sometimes short, but, oh, so bitter! I'm reading Theodore Roscoe's (1956) book "US Navy Destroyer Operations in WW II". My, the intensity and ferocity. We just can't grasp it today. Keep up the good work! :-)

)

Briney

7:18AM | Tue, 24 April 2012

Thanks for your encouragement. When I finish the Australia I'll use it for close ups more often... I've still got to revisit it a bit...

)

steelrazer

9:49AM | Tue, 24 April 2012

Really terrific job. It has a real sense of distance to it. It's not as easy as it looks to make everything fit convincingly, and to get a sense of atmospheric depth and presence. I really like what you've done with this. Nice work again!

)

Osper

11:35AM | Tue, 24 April 2012

We'll let the "Fletcher thing" pass for the good pict that it is. ;)

)

debbielove

12:07PM | Tue, 24 April 2012

Stunning work... Really good! Love this, a Fave! Rob

)

saphira1998

12:38PM | Tue, 24 April 2012

great

)

flavia49

4:07PM | Tue, 24 April 2012

outstanding

)

AliceFromLake

4:08PM | Tue, 24 April 2012

Great picture. I want to make the rebuildings of the Lexington class. They were intense, not only other guns but some rebuildings in barbettes and additional AA-guns and so on. When my actual project is finished I make the Lexington of 1942 and then Saratoga of 1943-45 (she looked totally different).

)

Briney

6:12AM | Wed, 25 April 2012

That is wonderful news... I'll keep an eye out for those! Thanks. I really appreciate seeing models like this.

)

ranman38

3:29PM | Wed, 25 April 2012

really outstanding

)

franco7

4:54AM | Mon, 30 April 2012

Great scene....... gives you the feeling of being in another boat looking out across the sea .....NICE

)

RG19

6:23AM | Fri, 18 May 2012

If I recall this correctly, the USS Fletcher herself was at the nighttime battles of Guadalcanal in August of 42. You would not be off by much with this fantastic image, showing the much older converted battle-cruiser and the "modern" analog computer equipped Fletcher class. Another First rate Pacific Theatre recreation!!!


1 136 0

01
Days
:
22
Hrs
:
40
Mins
:
09
Secs
Premier Release Product
Convention Centre for DAZ
3D Models
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$22.00 USD 50% Off
$11.00 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.