- Nov 17, 2017
- 120
- 558
Holy shit. I love this work. A real MILF, thank you for this piece of art.New MILF (W.I.P.)
View attachment 976778
Holy shit. I love this work. A real MILF, thank you for this piece of art.New MILF (W.I.P.)
View attachment 976778
I would need more pics to make a proper decision. More importantly, what are they wearing, asset wise?
I have no choice but agree...Holy shit. I love this work. A real MILF, thank you for this piece of art.
I dont know. But I know that I cant hear all this black- brown- red- white- yelloy shit anymore. Im 50 years now and my parents were children in WWII and both hate any racial themes (and these guys are from Germany) and so do I. We dont need to tag anything as interracial because we can see the color of the people. Love will heal us all. Peace bros and sis. Sorry if my comment was confusing. Had not my best day today. culay: Great art as always. Thank you for it.
Haha....taken me all damn day to figure out some crazy dforce nonsense that was beginning to make me think about a change of hair... think I've figured that issue out now. Of course, now I'm spending more time in photoshop tweaking the tears and mascara...another nightmare of trial and error. At the end of this I'll swear that it is quicker to make your own resources...lol.- The tears are probably the most obvious one, while they maybe start to flow in the visible direction, when she lays on her bed for herself, the probably change their direction when she tilts her head towards the camera. Then there is the dried up makeup within the tears, thanks to the til of her head the paths should be more spread out.
- The Hair and their point of contact with the teddy. I'm not sure if that is clipping or just an unhappy camera angle.
- The crop of her head looks weird, given how much space the image gives her on the left side.
- I love the lighting
- While you have the lovely micro compression between her arm and the mattress, I'm missing the same on the teddy.
- Sweet usage of DoF, but only as a personal preference I would make it a little bit more shallow, to move the bright vase even further in the background and enhance the focus on her.
- most of the other stuff I have in mind would be also more on personal preferences, and wouldn't help you in any way, I guess.
Where i see the mother of dragons i put a like, simple! Good jobView attachment 977106
New character I just picked up trying to recreate dragon Lady I still have to put the dragons in there but I wanted to test this before I put it in the scene let me know what y'all think.
Finally, I have time to answer. When I talk about tinting I mean the colour of the light that is emitted.When you say to use daylight and tint it, are you talking about selecting the background color on the environment tab?
Meshgrabber and Blender made life so much easier in the deform department. Look at the Hair of the fifth Hollywood image. The movement of the hair behind her hand couldn't be done with default morphs and the dFormer would have me frustrated to hell. Meshgrabber alone was enough to shape this movement.Haha....taken me all damn day to figure out some crazy dforce nonsense that was beginning to make me think about a change of hair... think I've figured that issue out now. Of course, now I'm spending more time in photoshop tweaking the tears and mascara...another nightmare of trial and error. At the end of this I'll swear that it is quicker to make your own resources...lol.
Currently working on deforming the teddy bear some more, will see how that work pans out over the weekend and hopefully I'll be a step closer to having some final renders soon thereafter. Then just need to finish the rest of the scene and save it all for later....
Awesome, thank you! The community here is the best![removed goof]
Finally, I have time to answer. When I talk about tinting I mean the colour of the light that is emitted.
Sickle Yield had a goodYou must be registered to see the linksabout night scenes that dabbles a little bit with this concept. In general, you change the colour of the light itself. It is also often used in cinema and television for night scenes and scenes with low light conditions like rain.