As a boy I wandered field and mountain, desert and ocean, forest and the icy reaches at the top and bottom of our world, and each place I found was another mystery waiting for me to discover. One day I found a silver doorway set into the side of a tall mountain. There were such detailed carvings of moons and planets and stars and all those things beyond our own small planet that I pulled the door open without hesitation, and within was the infinite apeirogon. I traveled the apeirogon on the back of a moonbeam I had rescued from the Land of Shadows. In time, I came to the Crystal Universe, and there I live to this day, writing of all I have seen.
Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.
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.
Comments (12)
uncollared
Wonderful scene. Love all the details and lighting. Excellent work
Radar_rad-dude
Classic Sam Clemmons logic! Love it! Everything old is new again! Most fantastic work, Wolf! Bravo!
eekdog
reminds me of the karate kid painting the fence.
miwi
Magnificent image, beautiful scene, excellent done!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ItWasNotAvailable
Amazing work in black and white. Colour is indeed not always necessary!
VDH
Very beutiful scene !!
jendellas
If he asked nicely he may get a go.
donnena
He's not painting the fence. He's coaxing the fence to display it's most beautiful self by introducing it to the pigment in the paint can. ;)
bakapo
Jack is clever; he will now have a helper. Good light and shadow in this render.
starship64 Online Now!
LOL! Classic Tom Sawyer. Nicely done.
dragongirl
Everything in the picture seems focused on that brush! Great composition!! Wonderful story image. 🙂
anahata.c
lol, I love the way you end this, with the new kid wanting to paint too...a real surprise. I'm getting a feeling from these 'storyboards' that you're creating whole scenes, but not weaving them together in your usual woven novelistic manner. And I assume (from what you've written) that you regard this as a storyboard, not as a completed work. But I want to say that there's something appealing about this format, even though you do the novelistic format with fullness and panache; I don't, however, feel this is a "thumbnail" for a novel; it's ike a series of scenes in a film, where each scene gives another picture of the whole. So I'm not saying I wouldn't like a novel out of this one day: I just like the feel of this vignette-style as well. It has a rhythm all its own.
You pack conflict in to a short dialogue, and somehow make it complete. I really like this interchange, it's complete even as it's short. And I love the ending. And the visual has a mysterious feel, for all the dark in it. I'm really enjoying this series.