sprockets The Snowman is coming! Realistic head model by Dan Skelton Vintage character and mo-cap animation by Joe Williamsen Character animation exercise by Steve Shelton an Animated Puppet Parody by Mark R. Largent Sprite Explosion Effect with PRJ included from johnL3D New Radiosity render of 2004 animation with PRJ. Will Sutton's TAR knocks some heads!
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Hash, Inc. - Animation:Master

Art Nouveau Imagery


MJL

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In the early 60's Stanley Mouse (Miller) was responsible for a large portion of the San Francisco concert posters at the Fillmore, the Carousel Ballroom, and the Winterland concert posters. He became closely associated with the Grateful Dead and did a ton of artwork for them as well.

 

His early stuff had a very strong art nouveau influence.

 

I've decided to emulate his style for my website imagery and have been playing around with the style. this is my first image.

 

This is a jpg conversion of a TGA rendering from A:M.

 

I'm having a problem getting crisp edges on the imagery (I'm using Corel Photo Paint X3). There are a lot of image specialists here on the forum, and I was wondering if anyone could give me some hints as to how to the crisp imagery that I'm after. Thank You in advance for any help.

 

Myron

Nouveau_Image_sA1.jpg

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Does the image come blurred like this from A:M? Is it a 3D model? You could render a larger version so you have better control in your paint application. When you have the look you like scale it down and make it a JPEG, that should always be the last step.

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Thank You, Rob.

 

I can work better manipulating cp's than I can using my mouse in my image programs. I like it in 3d because the ridges stand out. I've got quite a bit of time in it but I hope to improve my technique and cut the time down. I don't really care about the patch count because it's just imagery. I'm gonna work on lighting it next to hopefully bring out the highlights.

 

" I love the flow of Art Nouveau"

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Here is the finished Entry Page for my website overhaul.

 

I wanted an "Old Time" feel invoking the kind of feeling you get when you see a piece of machinery made in the late 19th or early 20th century. Antique from the time when things were made with quality and meant to last. Pretty high goal, I know, but I'm pretty happy with this image.

Come_On_In0.jpg

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Thank You, Robert.

Thanks, Gene, smooth is my middle name. (Well, actually its Mergatroyd but that's another post entirely.)

And Thank You, Nancy, that means a lot coming from the mistress of gorgeousnessous. :D (Thanks for the comments on FB, too. Congrats on your "needs it or not" task.)

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Art Nouveau derived from following organic flows and forms found in nature. I've been playing with a style of graphic art that I used to do by hand many, many years ago. Don't know why mushrooms fascinated me so, but I was drawing these years before I found out that mushrooms were desired for more that just their beauty.

 

I went through the Sweepers tutorial yesterday, wow, what a tool! Will save me hours of modeling time.

 

This image is a WIP, there's one more cluster and some accents to go, but it's starting to shape up.

2_Clusters.jpg

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Finished, for now, will revisit and refine, after some time passes. I'm happy with the general concept, but still need lots of tweaking to get it where I want it to go. I still can't decide which background looks best on this one.

Smaller_Final_Shrooms_PNG.jpg

Smaller_Final_Shrooms_TGA.jpg

SmallerFinal_ShroomsJPG.jpg

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I still can't decide which background looks best on this one.

 

If you want to keep the art nouveau look - then the black background is the way to go. The white has a more tooney feel. The blue is bleh. A different blue (more turquoisey, more vibrant, maybe with a green-turquoise gradient) might work, if you are wanting something "naturalish but still arty".

 

And then of course - you might try a coppery, or a regal red, or a deep purple or a deep rich forest green background - or variations that include gradients of those colors if you want high impact.

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Thanks, Shelton. I like the black, too, usually it pops the image out, but this time it seemed to pull it back in for some reason.

 

Ok, I'll blame all these on Nancy. But this tea is really quite good. Would you care for a cup, Gene? Ms Gormezano?

 

I know, I know, I'm getting sick of this one too (maybe it's the tea), last ones I promise. But it is amazing how the background color affects the image. Of them all, the neutral Taupe one seems to me to strike the right balance.

Blue_Clusters0.jpg

Faded_Blue_Clusters0.jpg

Gold_Clusters0.jpg

Split_Pea_Clusters0.jpg

Taupe_Clusters0.jpg

Copper_Clusters0.jpg

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Hmmmm...I hope you don't mind - but I couldn't resist.

 

It's not clear how your mushers will be used on your web site: full page? added as accents only ? with text ?, other imagery?

 

So I played - assuming it's a background for a page with some text. Hope this is food for thought when you come back to this.

 

I liked the black & grey/taupe backgrounds to start (I used grey) - here's what adding color does (deeper, richer, more complex mixtures).

 

Color always plays on feel rather than logic.

B1.jpg

Bgreen2.jpg

Bred3.jpg

Bgold4.jpg

Bblue5.jpg

Gblue6.jpg

Ggold7.jpg

Gred8.jpg

Ggreen9.jpg

G10.jpg

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Wow, Nancy, great stuff.

 

Making the mushroom image was actually the goal in itself. It was the electronic version of some art pencil sketching I did many years ago. I just wanted to see if I could reproduce it now that I'm starting to get a handle on modeling. It came out much better that I had hoped.

 

I wasn't necessarily going to use it on the website per se, but now I may have to find a place for it somewhere. :D

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  • 3 months later...

I've gone back and finished up this image to be closer to the original vision I started with. It has been a learning experience working with materials and bumpmaps (TURN MULTIPASS ON!) I think other versions of the vase will reappear in other imagery. I like the Raku feel.

 

EDIT: Here is the model if anyone would like to use it.

2_Vase_and_Greens.jpg

Squat_Vase.mdl

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I love the raku feel as well and design of the vase - beautiful!

 

And I love the flourishy organic thingies poouring out of the vase - wonderful!

 

But my feeling is that the neon green flat coloring and look of the "ribbons" doesn't match the coloring, 3D dimensionality of the jar.

 

Perhaps a more unsaturated copper tarnish or antique gold or malachite or brushed tarnished silver for the ribbons (if you want contrast with the jar) might look good?

 

Or even making jar & ribbons same material?

 

Love the designs.

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