the ground is from Carnival Entrance, I used the 2 trees from Iyeyasu’s Tomb, and the ivy / vines from Moon Gate and Parkside Heath
I tend to break things up and use bits and pieces rather than use the full sets. The ground planes from Carnival Entrance and Native Cheyenne Village have become a couple of my favorites, and I am always stealing ivy and vines from various sets to add foliage to scenes. The Iyeyasu’s Tomb trees get used a lot in my images as well. With post work or Poser’s grouping tool I can also break up things even more. I some times select a portion of a figure with the grouping tool and then click spawn new prop to create something different. This image was a straight render, no post work, no grouping, I just wanted to see what Poser Pro 2012 could do all on its own.
Ah cool.. would never have guessed the Iyeyasu’s Tomb items lol!
I’ve taken Curator Aquarum into Vue and it looks good. Added some further ruins behind and a bit of rubble to suggest a deserted city fallen down over time. I’ve wanted to use this atmosphere (Distant Drummer by Robin Kleb) for a long time but didn’t have the right scene but it worked here with a bit of sun moving.
I’ve taken Curator Aquarum into Vue and it looks good. Added some further ruins behind and a bit of rubble to suggest a deserted city fallen down over time. I’ve wanted to use this atmosphere (Distant Drummer by Robin Kleb) for a long time but didn’t have the right scene but it worked here with a bit of sun moving.
That’s nice, good job. I like the tone of the image, the colours work really well
our winters here have been getting a lot milder in recent years. I remember when I was a kid having to open an up-stairs window and shoveling snow into the house and into large metal wash tubs so we could melt it by the fire place and dump the water in the bath tub. We had to do this because the snow was up past the roof line and there was no other way to get out of the house. So we would shovel our way out the window, tunnel down to the front door and then dig a tunnel out to the road. Before a big storm we would park the cars out about 6 or 7 miles from the house at friend’s houses that lived on streets with more trees because they had less chance of getting snowed in. That way when we got snowed in we could take snow mobiles back and forth to where the cars were at. That was what winters used to be like here. I remember rarely ever going to school in December or January. Now we have had several years where you could go out in shorts and a t-shirt and cook X-mas dinner on the grill. And people tell me global warming is a myth.