Very nice and clean design and sculpt.
The cnc parts look like they were carved into stucco, cool.:tu:
Type: Posts; User: jmeyer
Very nice and clean design and sculpt.
The cnc parts look like they were carved into stucco, cool.:tu:
Sketch 2 is great.
I like how parts kind of emerge from the main tree shape.
They seem to become alive.
And more.
Cool and, again, a little psychedelic.
In one word: magical.
A whole lot of good stuff throughout this thread, remarkable.:tu:
Springtime is coming soon it seems.;)
:D That might be the truth behind many rural legends. ;) :tu:
Wow, that joker is extremely cool.
Extraordinary concept and execution.:tu:
:D Nice idea.
And welcome to ZBC.
Very nice creations, a pleasure to look at.
The whole thread. :tu:
This 2nd version is cool.
The organic look is definitely an improvement here.
Well deserved Top row, congrats.:)
Lots of stuff worth a look or two on your website, too.
Looking forward to see your progress steps.
Keep it up.:tu:
:) Thanks.
Hey, nice to see something new of yours.
Another classic that just makes you smile.:)
Especially like that floating guy.
That's a really cool organic piece. :tu:
Must be a major pain to clean it up, though.
Congrats to the winners and the other participants as well.
Impressive to see what can be done in just 3 hours.
Adding the names of the creators to their works would be nice.
I do like this version, actually both versions.
And the other sculpts in that style.
Cool stuff.
:cool: To my eyes this is even more convincing than the last one. Very nice.
Great job, especially the skin details are superb.
:D Cool cats.
Keyshot integration seems to work well, nice to see.
:cool: Impressive, to say the least. :tu:
Cool idea, nicely done.
The seams again:
For the pictures where you are closer to the structure you could try to build
just that part with your high poly elements instead of the dynameshed elements.
Or you could try to...
Somehow very psychedelic.:)
As for the seams: have you tried to project the hi-poly details to the
newly created Dynamesh to repair the seams?
My question should have been a bit more precise.
What I meant was : Do you recreate an existing historic dome or do you
design a new one from scratch, based on the ancient muqarna techniques?
Any...