Panorama of romanesque monastery
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I have made some panorama views of the romanesque monastery and uploaded them to you3dview (there are much more than these)
Here two examples:
A view from the crossing into the side aisle. You can also see the choir with two doors on both side which lead down to the crypt. The nave has a length of 46m (whole building 98m), the crossing tower is 32.5m high (with roof 42m). The church was constructed as part of a benedictine monastery in 1025 by Emperor Konrad II.[flash=452,361:tjifwsip]http://www.you3dview.com/viewer/viewer.swf?xml=http://www.you3dview.com/flvideo/228/viewer.xml[/flash:tjifwsip]
And the crypt:
[flash=452,361:tjifwsip]http://www.you3dview.com/viewer/viewer.swf?xml=http://www.you3dview.com/flvideo/182/viewer.xml[/flash:tjifwsip]
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Great panos. Lighting is very dramatic. Which soft did you use for rendering and could you explain "god ray" lighting in the first one please.
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I used Kerkythea 2008 with diffuse interreflection (normal photon mapping caused uneven lighting because the interior is quite dark). For the god rays, I used fog with absorption=1 and scatter=0.01 and everything else 0. In the first render, too much of the space was filled with god rays (almost everything grey-ish), so I mixed it with a normal render.
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Excellent Work.
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Great reconstruction. There's a need of a Fisheye to obtain the panos?
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I've never caught a fish , but Kerkythea can do spherical 360° images (scene -> camera -> projection: spherical)
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Excellent.
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Impressive
MALAISE
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Impressive
MALAISE
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@aerilius said:
I've never caught a fish , but Kerkythea can do spherical 360° images (scene -> camera -> projection: spherical)
How, you don't know a Fisheye lens? It's an objective for cameras with a very short focal length and a DOF extremely wide. In fact Kerkythea allows settings for a fisheye objective with a DOF of 360° horizontally and 180° vertically...
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Yes, I know them. But fisheye lenses or even catadioptric cameras are expensive. And we are lucky that Kerky can 'photograph' every angle at any time in history, here 1025 AD
(later, I'll post one of 312 AD ) -
Very nice. And great attention to the lighting.
I was hungry for much more res using the zoom though.
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Many thanks!!!
Yes, I already thought this. I would like to zoom in or to jump into my screen...
The image is already 3200px wide and it took hours to render (because of fog). When I tried 4000px, Kerkythea crashed unfortunately. -
Hi Aerilius,
These are great. No, excellent (if that's better than great). I really love them - they are so perfect they could deceive me.
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These are fantastic and very realistic. I must try a spherical render like this somewhen.
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