max Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 here is my last work done in the 15V. What a you think about. tell me please what`s wrong... Thanks for any ideas and critics!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Bigboote Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 Nice image, love the caustics. Only thing that nags my eye is the shadow is as dark under the glass as it is under the metal... Did you use double-thick patches in the glass? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heyvern Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 This is a very convincing "incandescent" light bulb but the main problem I see is that you should be using fluorescent bulbs to save on energy and protect the environment. Come on people! Global warming? Every little bit helps... even in 3D. -vern Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bentothemax Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 Looks good! I agree about the shadow. It does look too dark. Did you use two layers of patches for the glass? I don't think that is necessary in this case. I also think that you should explore with caustics for this model, those always look cool refracting through glass. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heyvern Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 Double thick mesh for the glass is a good question. Think about it this way... from a general view one single mesh would be good enough... but then you take into account the direction of the normals... should they face out or in? It would depend on how realistic it needs to be. My first guess is this model DOES have thickness to the glass... but that effect could also be the refraction caused by viewing the "edges". Hard to tell. If you end up with 50 of these suckers... lose the thickness... save on patch count. I have seen other 3D light bulbs that are not convincing because they lack thickness. In real life no matter how thin everything has thickness. The other question I have as far as realism is in regards to what type of light bulb this is? Obviously it doesn't have the "white powder" on the inside (to diffuse the light, not to get high with at a disco). So this would be some kind of "specialty" bulb? You want a challenge... create an incandescent bulb with the milky white transluscence of the inner coating showing through. Anyway... it looks great... even if it is killing the environment... p.s. Actually a fluorescent bulb would take longer to model... so it would use more energy... maybe in this case incandescent is better. -vern Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Bigboote Posted April 30, 2008 Share Posted April 30, 2008 Uh-oh... someone musta left the door to Vern's forum open and he got out...VERN! Get back in your own forum! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phatso Posted May 3, 2008 Share Posted May 3, 2008 I had to model a bulb a while back. You did a better job on the base than I did. A spiral is always tricky; a spiral that turns into somthing else is trickier. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
serg2 Posted May 3, 2008 Share Posted May 3, 2008 Good job, max Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DarkLimit Posted May 5, 2008 Share Posted May 5, 2008 -Thats an awesome render and model, really great results- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
max Posted May 6, 2008 Author Share Posted May 6, 2008 hi all and thank`s, here is some update: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
largento Posted May 6, 2008 Share Posted May 6, 2008 Looks real to me! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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