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Archive for July, 2007

Making of - Warrior Tools

Friday, July 6th, 2007

Warrior Tools Contest WinnerI’ve posted a previously unpublished “Making of” article I wrote for my winning entry (several years ago) in a 3D art contest at 3dLuvr.com - it’s not as in depth as I might like, but it does explain some of the experiments I was doing at that time: mainly, using displacement mapping to create interesting terrain.

You can find the article here.

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My Sites - Celtic Art & Retro-Futuristic Design

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

Celtic Art & Retro-Futuristic DesignEarlier I described how I built my personal web site and used it as a guinea pig for both site design and search engine optimization – then left it alone for a few years without realizing just how successful it’d become.

But in 2002, when I did notice how much traffic I was getting, I started to wonder if any of those visitors would like to own a piece of my work.

Now in those days I was a pixel-pushing laborer in the Computer Game Mines. Okay, nominally I was a manager, but you get the idea. The game business is notorious for requiring long hours from its serfs and for that reason I wasn’t doing as much of my own work as I’d have liked; but I was doing some, and I was especially interested in large, ambitious pieces in resolutions that were suitable for print – and at the heart of that, what I really wanted to do was to offer archival quality prints for sale.

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A Great Big Robot from Outer Space Ate My Homework

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

Mark Shirra’s “A Great Big Robot from Outer Space Ate My Homework” is yet another terrific animated short spawned by the Vancouver Film School. Nobody’s eating their homework over there.

Really nice work on the materials and textures, but it’s funny enough that you might not notice that at first. Nice one!

Harvested from 3D Total.

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The Call of Cthulhu silent film

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

What if they’d based a film on an H.P. Lovecraft story during his lifetime?

Not only would it have lacked the shlock of “Re-Animator”, but it would have been… silent! In glorious black and white! With thrills, chills, and title cards!

Just like this one, in fact.

What we have here - “Filmed in Mythoscope” - is a re-creation of what that might have been like. Don’t expect expensive (or even inexpensive) CGI here, folks. It’s all filmed with practical effects like hanging miniatures and the action takes place in wonderful, low- to no- budget sets. The most advanced thing going on here, except in the editing, is some judderingly retro stop motion animation.

The actors do a creditable job and the film, which weighs in at a brief 72 minutes, just approaches its own low budget nature - with quivering tentacles - and absorbs it, makes it its own, as a feature of its period style. It’s a great example of turning necessity into a virtue.

And should you buy or rent it, don’t fail to watch the making-of material in the bonus features. Once you know that the South Atlantic and the ruins of R’Lyeh were filmed in somebody’s back yard, you’ll be about ready to give it a go yourself.

It’s a fine adaptation, a curious object, and a lot of fun to watch. And should you speak a language other than English - even I think, Finnish - you can watch in your own mother tongue. The fact that all the dialogue’s on title cards meant that the makers could translate the movie into an eldritch and unspeakable variety of languages. Which, compelled by the will of the Old Ones, they did. Nifty!

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The Device Patented Process Indicating Apparatus

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

Mad Scientist Gauges

I’m always on the lookout for new additions to the Secret Laboratory, whether it’s sharks for the moat, or… in this case… nifty analog gauges to tell me whether space pirates have breached my defenses, or whether my coffee’s getting cold. (As if!)The Device

The Device Patented Process Indicating Apparatus promises to be all this, and more. Though I think it’s likelier to tell me how hard my cpu’s working.

The Device is a handsome, wood and brass built unit that offers two analog gauges and an indicator light; it’s a programmable, um, Device, and has a USB port so that it can talk to your computer. The custom software allows you to tell the unit what it should be monitoring (like my CPU usage). Though the web site mentions both “Electrotherapeutic Shock Intensity” and “Ebay Auction Status”, which, um, indicates just how versatile a Device it is. Whillikers!

Just wish it was available already - like those Weta rayguns!

 

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