oddernod:
I would go to war for my director after that.
You don't hear that anymore. Good to see a positive experience in visual effects. Our job is to help directors tell there stories. Im glad some feel the same way.
oddernod:
I would go to war for my director after that.
You don't hear that anymore. Good to see a positive experience in visual effects. Our job is to help directors tell there stories. Im glad some feel the same way.
By Jennifer Wolfe:
The Nvizible VFX team, supervised by Paddy Eason and with Gill James producing, is currently on location in Isle of Man. The work includes fully CG animated robots, flying vehicles, a spitfire plane, environments and explosions.
Another small shop doing big things. If you can, find a small place to start working at. Put in sometime there. The smaller places just might be the future.
Ian Failes:
If you enjoy the Technical Papers Fast Forward at SIGGRAPH – that session where presenters must race through their paper in an effort to convince conference-goers to check out the full presentation – then there’s a good chance you’ll also love SIGGRAPH Dailies.
These are always fun.
Magno Borgo:
Removal area/clean plate, regrained to match the background plate. It has an alpha channel, blurred to smooth transition. But when its composited Over the original plate (heavy grain), on the semi-transparent alpha region the grain is faint because of the blending.
This is a question that I have had asked to me many times. It's a very tricky question. I have heard lots of different ideas on how to solve the problem. Seeing that this question came from a nuke trainer, this is a problem for a lot of artist. Have a read.
The Foundry:
Please see below for a full schedule of presentations taking place at our Siggraph booth, number 103 in the Exhibition Hall.
Anyone going to Siggraph?
PaulJFranklin:
Beautiful Peter Ellenshaw matte painting from Spartacus. Amazing detail.
Leanne Burden:
It occurs about once every 14 months and is technically called a perigee full moon. At 221,823 miles from Earth, the supermoon was a feast for the eyes.
OK, only this one more.
Rosie Taylor:
An astronomical artist has created eye-opening illustrations imagining what the night sky would look like if the moon was replaced by the other planets in the solar system.
Love this type of thing. Really cool.
Mike Seymour:
Dawn over Weta as seen from Wellington
Im always a sucker for cloud images. Great photo Mike.