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Hash, Inc. - Animation:Master

D.Joseph Design

*A:M User*
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Posts posted by D.Joseph Design

  1. HA! Proof that dinosaurs and man can live together! :P

     

    Shadow. Drop shadows work for flat images, but here, the drop shadow does not work. Typical office lighting would usually cast shadows directly below the object. the only time that shadows are on the wall would be if an object was close to the way. Even then, all the office lights would make a very transparent shadow.

     

    The other thing is depth. The back wall appears way too close for the T. rex to fit. Perhaps add a shadow on the desk to make his neck and head seem to extend over the desk.

  2. D.Joseph, that last post got me thinking... this is going to be a 'real' museum. How is all this funded? Will school trips be taken around this place?

     

    The $25 million project is funded entirely by donations. AiG has a superb museum team that has researched nearly every notable museum in the world and have discovered hundreds of ways to cut costs by incredible amounts. That and many companies are donating materials or providing them at-cost to seriously reduce AiG's expenses. For example, I heard that all of the RJ-45 networking cable for AiG's new corporate offices was donated, saving more than $25,000.

     

    Once the museum opens, they will probably charge admission, just like all other museums. But lifetime charter members apparently get unlimited lifetime admission.

     

    School trips? In the wise words of Jess, "Not in this country" (unless USA legislators determine that offering alternative views is not violating "separation of church and state" and allow the children to make their own decisions, but again, refer to Jess's wisdom). But I'm sure that some private schools will tour.

  3. Bjorn, cool idea! I'll add that to my list.

     

    That being said, can I please ask what a 'Creation Museum' would have in it? There can't be any exhibits explaining how creation works (I wouldn't think, because there is no plausable mechanism to use).

     

    Quite the contrary. There are several working models that even evolutionists have acknowledged are plausible solutions, but they reject them simply because they don't support their presupposed ideas on origins.

     

    Creation Museum will follow a basic timeline that AiG has taught for some time. They call it "the seven Cs of history":

    • Creation: God spoke the world into existence from nothing. He created time, space, and matter in six literal days about 6,000 years ago.
    • Corruption: the entrance of sin into the world by Adam's rebellion and the resulting death and suffering as a consequence (including the first murder).
    • Catastrophe: because mankind was so wicked, God destroyed the world with a super-catasrophic global flood but saved Noah and his family in addition to two of every kind of land animal (including dinosaurs).
    • Confusion: the event of the Tower of Babel and the dispersion of languages and people groups.
    • Christ: when God became man, borne of a virgin, and dwelled in the flesh.
    • Cross: the ultimate climax of God's plan for man—the redemption available to us through His son Jesus Christ if we repent and confess with our mouths and believe in our hearts that Jesus Christ is lord and was raised from the dead.
    • Consumation: the rapture of Christ's birde, Christians, and the coming judgment on the world, and the eventual consummation of all to be restore to its original, perfect state.

    AiG will showcase these with a huge variety of scientific data presented through all sorts of means of display (games, interactives, videos, animatronics, exhibitis, and such). Visitors will be taught why we can trust the Bible, what the Bible says about Creation and how true science confirms it, and how it applies to our lives.

     

    I've visited the progressing Creation Museum many times and have been quite impressed with the professionalism and extensive scientific research going into every single detail (for example, would Adam, the very first man with all of the perfect, orginal DNA that caused all the variety we see today, have straight or curly hair? Even down to earlobes!). All information is very-well based in science and even flawed creationist arguments (like the questionable Paluxy River Tracks) will be critically examined.

     

    So you can probably tell that I'm excited about the museum's development. I'm honored to be a part of it through making this video.

     

    And concerning the rabbit trail of comments, I am not offended so don't worry about it. I am often still accused of certain things that some made jokes about, so I wasn't sure whether take it as a slight attack or not. But don't worry about it. All is forgiven. (Now if want to call me a ... whatever that dreaded name from Elf was, then I'd take offense. :))

  4. Is this for the creation museum being built in Kentucky? I think it was Kentucky. I just read about it a couple of weeks ago. I am looking forward to it. My wife will love it.

     

    Yes it is. And if this video goes well, then you may get it on DVD if you're a Creation Museum Charter Member.

  5. Funny. That's the way their old logo does it. I'll see if I can get a copy of that to post for reference. I hate that swoosh, so I want to de-emphasize it any way that I can.

     

    I've thought of a cool still-frame idea. Make the logo out of stone or wood and place it in grass with a partly cloudy background. And then place the camera in the grass looking up at it. I can't remember where else that I've seen this.

     

    Another idea is something simply like was done for the movie title in Disney's Atlantis trailers. Several vertical flashes are replaced with the rotating letters.

  6. Yeah, it is already two passes. I was wrong. Bummer.

     

    Here are two more renders showing the (new) lighting difference between switch stages.

     

    YiR04-Room1u-1908.jpg

     

    YiR04-Room1u-1909.jpg

     

    I also did end up changing the switch to a standard switch. I'll post renders of that later.

  7. ... have you considered capping Shaggy's finger ends?

     

    I think it gives him an interesting appeal. Kind of "what's-up-with-that?" emotion. :)

     

    Actually, I had already capped the fingers in that render, but I forgot the thumbs, which I promptly corrected later. I originally intended to just fix this frame in Photoshop so no one would see it, but oh well.

  8. It needs a bevel. If it has a bevel, it should be stronger.

     

    I've also found that environment maps (also called reflection maps) really enhance reflective objects. Just make a black image in an image editor and brush several white, soft-edges, straight streaks in it. Be sure to set the environment map as additive and play with the opacity. You could even use a grayscale photo of something.

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