3ds Max finish for SU model
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I would like to see that movie when finished, it seems very smooth and it is certainly an interesting building to view!
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Sure, Dylan - I will post all of them here (I just need to compress them a little bit and convert to flash - so they may lose some quality).
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Just another movie.
This is the Dominican monastery at the excavation fo which I already worked as a freshly graduated archaeologist in 1991.
Of course we did not find everything like this then...
(The file is a bit big - sorry for that -so it needs some download time. There is a better resolution wmv file here)[flash=480,384:2is289h9]http://www.gaieus.hu/su/videos/Dominican.swf[/flash:2is289h9]
Again, I need to express that the 3D Max rendering was done by a colleague, not me. I just made the model in SU.
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Unreal dude. I expect to see this on the History channel soon
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Unfortunately it has also lost a lot of its quality during compression and export to swf.
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Im jealous, the USA sucks for these sorts of things as the oldest thing we got that is man made isnt more than a couple hundred years old. Good looking model.
(Masta Squidge)
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Well, to tell the truth, when the Turks invaded my city in 1543, within a few decades they pulled down most of these churches and monasteries to replace them with mosques (but at least we have the northmost - and still working! - mosques from the Ottoman Empire now )
Well, here is the cathedral (some pics of which I have already posted):
[flash=480,384:2bdapbnf]http://www.gaieus.hu/su/videos/Cathedral.swf[/flash:2bdapbnf]
It is more or less intact though have been rebuilt twice since the Turkish rule ended at the end of the 17th century.
There is a better resolution wmv file here. -
Added some hi(er)-res wmv files to the video posts...
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Well, another wmv file about the Carmelite Monastery can be found here.
Since it is a female order, they got some blossoming trees here (say almond or peach maybe ) -
Gaieus,those are amazing, just curious though, were those modeled by eye and memory or did you use text books with pictures, frequent trips to the site, any kind of floor plans or measurements, or something else?
Mike
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Well, Mike,
This is my profession: I am an archaeologist and historian. I even worked at some of the excavations of these churches when just finished university.
So mostly I have the site "plans" that we draw (exact measurements etc) and access to all the archives of the museum as well as the Chapters Archives, too.
Then I had access to the survey measurements of the city itself, too, so most of the locations are pretty accurate.
Since most of these buildings have gone by now, I had to reconstruct some window tracery from fragments (or at least make - some simplified but "resembling" variations since you cannot see them from here, can you) and also the vaultings of the churches (they are all modelled from inside, too).
Then we have some old drawings, pictures views of some buildings as well as the whole city...
So it was quite a nice, challenging and interesting job where of course I still had to use a lot of imagination to add details which has no traces any more.
It's about to finish now so I can get back to my "favourite" late Roman buildings that we excavated last year.
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@gaieus said:
Points taken, Eric - you are right in both things.
That's why I posted them; I've been looking / checking them for too long and my eyes just skip a lot of details for they're "used to them".I would also like to see a cross on those monasteries* and churches. A small but important detail imo, otherwise excellent work.
- I live in such a place so I know.
(sgpm)
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That is also true but in all three depictions of the town that exist from the "pre Turkish period" here (from before 1543 - after which the Turks, capturing the city for 143 years, demolished the churches) so there cannot be crosses seen.
For us nowadays it would be obvious to put a cross and we had quite long debates but then insisted on the depictions.
And now I cannot really tell the guy to re-render the films on his machine for they took about almost a week each!
Tahnks for this input though - I'm kind of regretting now that we did not put them there...
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Gaieus,
You have me nearly drooling here. Fine job and very pro.
I know lots of colleague architects and engineers nearby who won't come close to half of what you have accomplished in this sense. Your flyaround presentation is great. I saw the other one in the website too.
You can really say you are contributing with the Historic memory of your country. That's the best heritage you can leave to your kin.
Congrats and best regards,
Odlanier
(I... think I know whom I shall hire for a large job I have in mind... in astral time, that should be ]
(odlanier)
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Thanks Odlanier, I did (still actually do) really like this project myself - though I was kind of unexperienced with such huge models. I'd do a lot of things differently now just to speed up and make my workflow easier.
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Just a shot of the old Franciscan church and monastery.
It was later turned into a mosque (under the Turkish reign) and later re-converted to a church again. Today it's a baroque church with a kind of classicist rebuilding from outside (the sanctuary has been put onto the other - wester - end of the church and a northern aisle was also added).
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Franciscan Church render...Is that Max render? Very nice....I like the atmosphere. It looks like you have been using vignetting. The grass looks very realistic.Not sure about the scale of the roof tiles though. They look a bit on the big side.
edit: of course it is bloody Max it says in the name of the tread
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Hi sepo,
yes, the roof tiles are a bit bigger than in the "real world" they should be but when we were experimenting with the real sizes, they just didn't show at all.
This is a little "cheat" for the sake of the appearance (the final "visitors" won't look at it with an expert eye like yours )
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Your work is impressive Gaieus
I am downloading the videos now.
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Don't forget that this was a "team work" - I'm just "learning" max now... (plus I don't have an own copy so I gan only put my hand on it when doing it at the "team's" office)
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