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How many spheres are we talking about?
Thousands, but that's not important. Like I said I'm interested in this particular method, alternatives are already known.
something global using a gradient and noise I am thinking
I have a request in via the DAZ3D BugTracker to do exactly this with the replicator, so that each replicated object has a different colour selected from a range (or it could be applied to other parameters too). But at present I'm not sure there is a way. I have managed to produce the effect on a regular array using some maths and a shader working in global space, but that restricted objects to being aligned to a global grid.
If the objects are fairly widely spaced, you could use some form of noise and a shader in global space to mimic this, as the variation on each object would be a lot less than variation between objects. I agree that it should be included as a basic function.
Dittoing the replicator suggestion (and speaking of, I'd also like single axis scaling, rotation in specified increments, etc).
Maybe the Formula "brick" (or what do we call them in Carrara?) could have more parameters and functions such as the coordinates of the object being shaded, a random number generator, etc.
Looks like noise in global space is probably the way to go in this case though.
Extremely well done!
Just coming back to replicators for a moment, you can add a sphere to a replicator, and then duplicate it a number of times and give each sphere a different shade or color, the replicator will randomly assign one of the different colored spheres. A bit of a manual way to do it, but better than individually coloring and placing thousands of spheres!
That is the workaround I'm going for, in this case ten or so shades of gray is sufficient. I was just curious about other possibly more elegant solutions that scale better.
Yesterday I replicated 20x20 instances of Stonemason's Urban Sprawl 2 and it occurred to me that more control over rotation would be very helpful when dealing with stuff like buildings arranged in a grid.
You can use the same sort of trick, by duplicating and rotating by 90 degrees (do it once and then just hit Ctrl-D and each will add a further 90 degrees rotation). Have them all within the replicator and each instance will choose a random variant.
That's going to be some big city!
Extremely well done!
thank you :-)
good to see you !
You can use the same sort of trick, by duplicating and rotating by 90 degrees (do it once and then just hit Ctrl-D and each will add a further 90 degrees rotation). Have them all within the replicator and each instance will choose a random variant.
That's going to be some big city!Yes... huge city!
I thought that I might add: For 'Figure" pieces that won't 'duplicate', inagoni's "Replica" plugin is amazing! You could use it to replicate on very customized grids, but after it's done you can manipulate each instance individually and set their shaders differently if you wish as well.
some old pictures most of them model in Hex and render in Carrara some post work
You can use the same sort of trick, by duplicating and rotating by 90 degrees (do it once and then just hit Ctrl-D and each will add a further 90 degrees rotation). Have them all within the replicator and each instance will choose a random variant.
I know, but again the workaround becomes fairly tedious with nontrivial numbers of objects to be replicated.
hathatool, that is really cool! Great work!
I know, but again the workaround becomes fairly tedious with nontrivial numbers of objects to be replicated.
PhilW actually shows some really clever was to remove most of the tedium in his "Advanced Techniques" series. It's amazing how thoroughly distinct an outcome can be had by mixing together all of the tips he gives on this subject alone.
That's why we need the feature that I requested! (and for other reasons...) ;-)
In terms of starfields (for space scenes), I have just posted (in the free stuff over at Renderosity) a scene which allows you to render starfields with a few adjustable parameters (densities and sizes of stars). The scene is also a simple space environment which sets up a simple sky dome for GI animated rendering if you want.
I can't figure out how to post a freebie here at DAZ (it's very easy at Rendo for me) so feel free to go and get it if it's useful!
-Kix
what's up guys ?
http://youtu.be/RxiowDVft-Q
I really should check the forum more often. Always nice to see my models in use.
They weren't really designed for such close renders, but they look pretty cool.
Nice work!