Monday, November 2, 2009

Ben Procter concept Transformers robot art

Ben Procter's website and post on conceptships. It's going to be kind of hard to top this post here on this blog:)











































Keywords: professional concept artist ben procter matte painter technical designer on transformers revenge of the fallen concept robot art film entertainment movie industry bumble bee flash turntable animation optimus prime megatron devestator incinerator arcee boombot ironhide


Saturday, September 19, 2009

lounge

Render nightclub, or rather its part lounge. Made in less than a week)))




Waiting for comments and notes).

Monday, June 1, 2009

lounge

Render night club, lounge. Make in less than a week)))





I wait forward to comments and notes).

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Perfect isometric 3D animation!

Mike’s camera is constantly swiveling around this iso-world, and YET the rules of iso-symmetry are somehow still VERY intact. What rules do I mean?… well, we all know on paper (or in your 2D illustration programs) isometric art conforms to an infinity parallel grid. So every iso-artist begins by drawing out a ton of diagonal straight lines that are equi-distant from each other and uses that as a guide for every line to follow. The Grid is God, whether or not it lives to be visible in the end of the piece, its still the law. And if you grew up playing Paperboy by Atari (or grew up centuries ago before artists used perspective lines) than you probably have some serious love for isometric art. Which is why its so painfully ugly when its done wrong.

subprime from beeple on Vimeo.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Philips - Carousel

Very cool video work:
Today I uploud their 3D models, I think it would happen more often.

models Stark

models Bar stul 2

models Bar stul 3

models Bar stul 1


I look forward to your comments.
Let me say at once that some of their chairs, I just edit.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

A 2007 AEP post, UI control via webcam, mentioned XTreme Reality 3D, "a piece of software that works with your webcam to let you control applications and games with your hand in real space." It turns out that others were working on similar controls for TVs, according to NewTeeVee in Hands On with Softkinetic’s Hands-Controlled TV. Here's an excerpt:

"We write a lot about how the world of content available through your television set is undergoing a dramatic change. But the changes happening to your TV aren’t just what’s on or how it gets there, but also the way you interact with your TV set. Forget remote controls and buttons when you’ve got hands to change the channel and adjust the volume. We’ve been following this gesture-controlled TV trend for a while and recently sat down with Softkinetic to get a demo of their solution."

Here's a few demonstrations of the trend: