Viper, these are looking superb!!!Now you need to start playing with the ships, adding shadows and altering brightness/contrast to suit their surroundings!Also for lights check out some of the many Photoshop Lightsabre tutorials on YouTube. Applying some new, complex techniques will also add to your understanding of the software, and will get you moving around some of the more interesting tools. You are such a great contributor to this forum, I would love to see your skills develop as you have an amazing and inspirational imagination.
Sweet stuff VA. On the front page!Tamer, thanks again for the Front Page. It means a lot to me!
Thanks for all of the wonderful complements, now for the next one. "The fastest hunk of junk in the galaxy" the famous YT-1300 Millennium Falcon, rendered in light oil with a custom backround to represent Kessel and enhanced lighting effects for the front mandible flood lights, lens flare, and aircraft style running lights.
Quote from: Viper Aviator on April 02, 2011, 11:22:44 PMThanks for all of the wonderful complements, now for the next one. "The fastest hunk of junk in the galaxy" the famous YT-1300 Millennium Falcon, rendered in light oil with a custom backround to represent Kessel and enhanced lighting effects for the front mandible flood lights, lens flare, and aircraft style running lights.I like the look of the stuff you have here. I'd like to know more about your way of doing it. What process are you referring to when you say "rendered in light oil"?
While undertaking a mission of exploration in the Unknown Regions for new worlds to bring into the 1st Galactic Empire, The Super Star Destroyer Allegiance comes across a small blue planet, the third from it's sun in a system of 9 planets that has a thriving, but ultimately primitive civilization.
Here is a modification originally done for the game Star Wars Battlefront II, it depicts the last stand of the Alliance to Restore the Republic on the remote planet of Hoth. The image was modified by re-doing the lighting source, modification of the "muzzle flash" from the blaster and laser cannons and utilizing a filter to render the image in oil style. ENJOY!