This work is still in progress.
Different Works in Progress
- FarbigeWelt
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Re: Liquidglass - 2nd Generation
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
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- FarbigeWelt
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Zoom out of Birch. 'The Groove' - first impressions
About a year ago I rendered a tree in the wind with falling leaves. One of the feed-backs told me to check the Blender add-on The Groove among others. Fall is approaching and I like doing things in larger cycles while improving results in each cycle. Finally, I got weak yesterday and bought The Grove.
My first impressions of what I got for 119 Euro are ambivalent.
The add-on, a larger user interface which opens in the tool bar at Blender's left side via Add>Mesh>The Groove. There are plenty of parameters to grow a tree. Very fortunately there are several dozens of tree presets. They help a lot to understand the add-on. Further there are good tool tips for each parameter.
A tree grows according to Add years, i.e. a tree can be grown from zero or as the action tells a tree can be aged further executing it.
There are no leaves supported directly. Instead The Groove uses twigs. And here is the backside of the add-on, there are a lot of textures available for the bark but there is not any twig example in the package.
At least I found an easy example for download in the first step manual. (There are many good looking twigs available, 9.60 Euro each. I may buy some of these later.)
After a few renders I tweaked the available simple twig, i.e. solidified leaves, added subdivision, moved leaves and sub twigs at a more reasonable positions. Then I added subdivision to the tree model.
Materials are easy to be redefined, because there are already Cycles material defined for the few parts of the twig and the tree.
With view port rendering and a few next renders I optimized Glossy transluscent for the leaves and set the twigs material of the tree to 0.0 opacity.
Still I use Blender 2.79b, The Grove is available for both versions 2.79b and 2.8.
I think i will switch soon to Blender 2.8 at least as soon as BlendLuxCore supports all current features of LuxCoreBlender.
Animated GIF image, click to view
My first impressions of what I got for 119 Euro are ambivalent.
The add-on, a larger user interface which opens in the tool bar at Blender's left side via Add>Mesh>The Groove. There are plenty of parameters to grow a tree. Very fortunately there are several dozens of tree presets. They help a lot to understand the add-on. Further there are good tool tips for each parameter.
A tree grows according to Add years, i.e. a tree can be grown from zero or as the action tells a tree can be aged further executing it.
There are no leaves supported directly. Instead The Groove uses twigs. And here is the backside of the add-on, there are a lot of textures available for the bark but there is not any twig example in the package.
At least I found an easy example for download in the first step manual. (There are many good looking twigs available, 9.60 Euro each. I may buy some of these later.)
After a few renders I tweaked the available simple twig, i.e. solidified leaves, added subdivision, moved leaves and sub twigs at a more reasonable positions. Then I added subdivision to the tree model.
Materials are easy to be redefined, because there are already Cycles material defined for the few parts of the twig and the tree.
With view port rendering and a few next renders I optimized Glossy transluscent for the leaves and set the twigs material of the tree to 0.0 opacity.
Still I use Blender 2.79b, The Grove is available for both versions 2.79b and 2.8.
I think i will switch soon to Blender 2.8 at least as soon as BlendLuxCore supports all current features of LuxCoreBlender.
Animated GIF image, click to view
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
MacBook Air with M1
Re: Zoom out of Birch. 'The Groove' - first impressions
That's great! I also tried to make some trees recently. With a little cheaper addon "Sapling Tree Gen". It was not so easy, but fortunately I have some birches right in front of my window, so that's it: I downloaded from textures.com something which looked like birch branch to use in place of leaves.FarbigeWelt wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2019 4:21 pm About a year ago I rendered a tree in the wind with falling leaves. One of the feed-backs told me to check the Blender add-on The Groove among others. Fall is approaching and I like doing things in larger cycles while improving results in each cycle. Finally, I got weak yesterday and bought The Grove.
I think it turn out fine with just 1592 tris, so I can have them in numbers. I didn't find free bark texture though and was too lazy to go out and shoot it myself.
CPU Bidir + Metropolis | Core i5-4570
- FarbigeWelt
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Growing Oak - 46 y in 10 s - 'The Groove' - second impressions
The Groove 8 (pay add-on for Blender 2.80) is out, with many new features.
It highlight is, very easy to set up, the animation of growing trees.
A 46 years old oak takes a lot of RAM. Because each frame contains an oak of different age, the animation takes sum mem of oak frame1 to oak frame n. For the 46 years, the add-on computed 51 frames. These frames contain ~4000 objects using 11.6 GB (10 GB in task manager). The blender file takes 3.7 GB.
Animated GIF, click to view.
It highlight is, very easy to set up, the animation of growing trees.
A 46 years old oak takes a lot of RAM. Because each frame contains an oak of different age, the animation takes sum mem of oak frame1 to oak frame n. For the 46 years, the add-on computed 51 frames. These frames contain ~4000 objects using 11.6 GB (10 GB in task manager). The blender file takes 3.7 GB.
Animated GIF, click to view.
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
MacBook Air with M1
- FarbigeWelt
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Who loves Riddles? 1) How looks the scene behind?
Physical based rendering is full of beautiful wonders waiting to be discovered by some curious playful features-stroller.
The picture below is a real LuxCoreRender result, 90% de-noised, with a simple hue shift and little value adjustment in compositor.
What do you think how does the scene look behind the picture? Note: There will be some hints in later posts.
The picture below is a real LuxCoreRender result, 90% de-noised, with a simple hue shift and little value adjustment in compositor.
What do you think how does the scene look behind the picture? Note: There will be some hints in later posts.
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
MacBook Air with M1
Re: Different Works in Progress
Very nice render FarbigeWelt.
BTW how your Rx 5700Xt perform now with last radeon 2020 driver ? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGg-oFnpdcs
BTW how your Rx 5700Xt perform now with last radeon 2020 driver ? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGg-oFnpdcs
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Re: Who loves Riddles? 1) How looks the scene behind?
It reminds me of wall reflections from a stained glass window but I'm pretty sure it is something else, with caustics and maybe some X-trahedronFarbigeWelt wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2019 1:11 pm What do you think how does the scene look behind the picture?
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Re: Who loves Riddles? 1) How looks the scene behind?
Hi epilectrolytics,epilectrolytics wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2019 7:30 pm
It reminds me of wall reflections from a stained glass window but I'm pretty sure it is something else, with caustics and maybe some X-trahedron
You guess is porobably quite close. With the hint in the next post, you should be able to refine your guess.
Cheers!
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
MacBook Air with M1
- FarbigeWelt
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Re: Who loves Riddles? 1) How looks the scene behind?
A First Hint (, after a posting break of a few weeks.)FarbigeWelt wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2019 1:11 pm Physical based rendering is full of beautiful wonders...
The picture below is a real LuxCoreRender result...
What do you think how does the scene look behind the picture?
Look at the picture below. What do you see? What's the source of the nice picture in a former of my posts?
Next, a rather different View of the very Source
Light and Word designing Creator - www.farbigewelt.ch - aka quantenkristall || #luxcorerender
MacBook Air with M1
MacBook Air with M1
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Re: Who loves Riddles? 1) How looks the scene behind?
I'm unable to figure out what your set-up is but this high contrast image is some great piece of art!FarbigeWelt wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2020 3:15 pm Next, a rather different View of the very Source
Cube of Dispersions 3.png