Woodland Drive
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Masterfull post processing Bravo !
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Really inspiring work! Great architecture too. Not often do you see natural entourage, but the people look perfectly composited! Great mood!
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2 more from low level,with low evening sun(the best type of lighting I think)
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amazing work again, i'm allways wondering wich software u use to create such nice vegetation...
best
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incredible lighting ...one thing though: the wall texture on the third picture leaves a very small piece of the tiling on the left side...moving it a little to the left would look better i think. i guess it would be difficult to build these small parts in reality.
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Is it all modelled? I mean cars, plants, grass?
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Carloh - maybe it's intentional to suggest the thickness of those blocks?
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Awesome!!! I initially thought they were post construction. Hope the finished project looks as good.
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@timinder said:
Carloh - maybe it's intentional to suggest the thickness of those blocks?
possibly...didn't think of that
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The edge tile on the corner was just a happy coincidence when I applied the material but it works well to indicate the thickness as timinder wrote!
Heres another view,this time from the rear,across a garden pool.
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Some small lights added
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Lovely composition...!
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As we are coming to that time of year,a snow scene version.
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wow that snow scene has a fantastic atmosphere how did you add the snow? is it geometry or some fancy displacement texture?
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The snow banks are sketchup.I scaled and stretched an irregular rock and placed it where I thought the snow should go.The snow on the trees was done by changing the colour of the leaves' texture in photoshop and re-applying it in Thea.
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You've nailed it...
It looks absolutely spot on...! (looking for standing ovation smileys) -
Here's a slightly revised version with the water made to look more icy,and the red bike added.
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A darker and more compact scene
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Just awesome!
That looks quite expensive with stone (or cast stone?) wall slabs, but there can't be a better way to show how worthwhile it would be (in architectural terms).
Peter
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A polaroid version at night done by placing an omni light behind the camera
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