Late Night Sketch

in OnChainArt3 years ago

QuickieLandscapeWEB.jpg

One of the things I've been experimenting a lot with lately is various ways and balances of combining 3D and 2D art. Each medium has it's benefits and drawbacks, so I want to do a lot of quick sketching to explore the balance.

QuickieLandscape.png

The primary benefit of 3D at this point for me is speed. Speed of getting something down, speed of iteration, tons of detail in no time at all. The image above is the 3D render that I painted the final sketch on top of and creating something like this takes less than ten minutes or right around depending on decisions I make and tweaking.

THe drawback is I sacrifice some manual design choices as these mountains are created with sort of randomized noise patterns and displacement. I have a lot of control but not TOTAL control that just painting it all by hand would lend me. Then when it comes to things like atmospheric perspective, it's a lot easier to just paint that vs simulating it in 3D to get it to look how I want. Similar deal with clouds and things like that. It's easier to just paint some clouds vs messing with VDB's for a still image. Of course this is all meaningless for animation. It would mostly need to be done in 3D or you could do some compositing to integrate 2D elements into the BG. Anyway, this is just the result of a night of playing around. Hopefully I'll have more time to crank out a few more experiments like this and be able to effectively incorporate it into work I spend a bit more time on.

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wow what an amazing art work thanks a lot for sharing.

It's a great job, you can clearly see the 3D format, the mountains stand out.

Cool, what's the software you used for rendering 3D? is the learning curve for that software steep?

 3 years ago  

It's Cinema 4D and the Octane Render plugin in Cinema 4D. So it's kinda hard to talk about the learning curve. 3D software in general is a bit technical and challenging to first get into, but of all the 3D software, Cinema 4D is the easiest in my opinion, and at one time or another I've used just about all of them.

Also depends on your prerequisite knowledge, like if you already have a strong understanding of digital imagery in general, you'd understand everything a lot faster.

wrong account, but yea, that :)

Looked it up on YouTube and saw the software in action. Too much to handle for my potato laptop and already guessing it's light years for me to learn. I barely survived simple blender tutorial. :P