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KurtF

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Posts posted by KurtF

  1. Felix, Tomas,

    glad you enjoyed the animations. It seems even short films made by smaller firms are becoming very rich with detailing and cinematic camera movement.

    Tomas, good luck on your music video. Keep us posted with 'making of' and 'behind the scenes'.

  2. Glad folks found it useful.

    As for EI - we'll see how development proceeds under it's new management. Tomas hinted (when posting on another thread) that Major changes had been made. Hopefully some of these changes are to improve Animator's code base, allowing for future development and modernization.

    That's my hope anyway.

  3. The bulk of the information in this video relates to compositing, not 3D. However, several minutes in the presenter does some Amazing things with the function curve editor in Fusion.

    http://vfxpedia.com/images/SwingingDoors_Medium.mp4

    It would be nice if EIAS would have adjustments like these available for it's function curve editor. There is a "Shape Box mode" which is like a 2D Free Form deformation tool. Very handy to achieve natural motion. There is also a "Time Offset mode" which allows scaling the keys to avoid overly mechanical looking motion.

  4. Looks like the Woody3D is a development platform to add that kind of functionality, tree generation and rendering, to your own app.

    So a 3rd party developer, or EIAS 3D, could buy a license, develop an EIAS plug in, and sell it. Don't know how much effort would be required to do so however. But there are some possibilities there. Especially since Onyx has had trouble with the Mac OS being a moving target.

  5. After World War II there were some books available on how to read, or interpret, aerial recon photos. They listed standard sizes for roadways, door and window heights, other standard measurements. These, coupled with some tools, allowed a person to create fairly accurate maps.

    Now- I didn't see any of those reference books listed when I tried to search. I guess with newer, modern techniques of surveying, along with the software, those old techniques outdated.

  6. Hello Felix, all,

    We lack a lot of things that are standard in other packages but i hope the new management in EiAS will deal with it properly.

    This is my hope as well. Five upgrade cycles that focused completely on rendering was a huge mistake. Future development of EI should strive for more balance, to turn EI into a full featured, well rounded software package.

  7. Very nice Scott.

    I like the smooth movement of the camera over the landscape. The final camera position shows lots of nice details, the fisheye clouds moving, the puff of steam from the pumping mechanism, a burst of fire at the top of the large ring. Pretty sweet how the doors above the conveyor swing open for each game piece.

    Of course - everything is just so shiny!

  8. I know- the thread title sounds terrible. But it's a technique for rendering that Pixar has developed that's been used now in several feature films.

    The Igors are rendering geniuses, so if anybody can make sense of this and get it implemented into EI, they'll be the ones.

    Here's some links:

    Pixar White Paper

    Abstract

    3D Delight Implementation

    I'm sure there's more available. This technique is more suited for Animation, as it renders quickly (though perhaps not as accurately) and thus works when you've got hundreds or even thousands of frames to create.

    Thanks.

  9. Ola' Tomas, Igors, Ian, Richard, and all.

    No one else has mentioned it, so I want to say thank you for the recent newsletter highlighting development of EIAS. It was nice to get communication from EIAS 3D.

    The new model import sounds like a much needed, and very useful improvement to Animator. It will make day to day use of EI more fun and productive.

    Thanks again, and keep up the good work.

  10. If you decide you want the program, look for it on ebay listed by TubeTape. They are an authorized reseller in the US. I got it for about half price, and it included a 9' x 12' green screen.

    Ross

    Nice tip, thanks for pointing this out.

    Also - happy to report that a Windows (64 bit) version of Ramen is up and available. The developer continues to move forward porting some OpenFX filters to work in Ramen, including the defocus filter from Blender:

    defocus Node

    Looking good for the freelance compositor who needs node based compositing.

  11. Definitely Quicktime Pro. Well worth the $30.oo to purchase.

    Best way to go is to render out an image sequence, which is exactly like a movie, just one, single frame at a time. Then import the image sequence into Quicktime Pro and convert to .mov, .avi, or whatever you might need.

    Reasons this works the best: in case of a software crash, re-rendering only has to happen from the last, finished frame. If a crash occurs while rendering to Quicktime (or other movie file) you've lost the whole thing. Also, a single frame can be opened in Gimp or Photoshop for retouching, there's better quality with less compression for stills. You've got a lot more flexibility down the line. If you start with a movie file, your downstream flexibility is limited.

    Hope you and your brother enjoy 3D with EIAS.

  12. Some folks have reported having good luck with this companies products:

    http://fxhome.com/

    They're sort of After Effects lite, for folks on a budget.

    Ramen is a free, open source compositor. However, it's currently only on Linux and Macintosh, and requires you pull down the various source code libraries and compile it yourself. I am keeping an eye on Ramen's progress, as it looks like (for me anyway) it could be just the solution I've been seeking.

    http://ramenhdr.sourceforge.net/index.html

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